The 'Penninic nappes' or the 'Penninicum' are one of three
nappe stacks and
geological zones in which the Alps can be divided. In the western Alps the Penninic nappes are more obviously present than in the eastern Alps (in
Austria), where they
crop out as a narrow band. The name ''Penninic'' is derived from the
Pennine Alps, an area in which rocks from the Penninic nappes are abundant.
Of the three nappe stacks the Penninic nappes have the highest
metamorphic grade. They contain high grade
metamorphic rocks of different
paleogeographic origins. They were deposited as
sediments on the
crust that existed between the European and
Apulian plates before the Alps were formed. They are characteristically
ophiolite sequences and deep
marine sediments, metamorphosed to
phyllites,
schists and
amphibolites.
Subdivision in the Western Alps
Four paleogeographic domains can be recognized in the Penninic nappes of the
Western Alps:
★ rocks from the former European
continental margin that were
subducted and
obducted again.
★ rocks from the
continental crust of the
Valais Ocean, metamorphosed
ophiolites and other
sedimentary rocks from this disappeared oceanic
basin. The occurrence of
eclogite lenses shows these rocks were subducted to great depths in the Earth’s mantle. Valais sedimentary rocks include thin
Cretaceous limestones (now
marbles) and
Tertiary flysch which is now turned into (
mica-)
schists.
★ rocks from the former
Briançonnais microcontinent. These are rocks from the lower
continental crust deformed and
intruded by
Variscan granites, but also metamorphosed sedimentary rocks:
graphite-bearing
Carboniferous rocks, red
sandstones from the
Permian period,
Triassic evaporites and thin limestones of the
Jurassic and lower Cretaceous. Examples of Briançonnais
terranes are the Sankt Bernard and Monte Rosa nappes; the
Monte Rosa and the
Mischabelhörner are formed by hard Briançonnais
gneisses.
★ rocks from the former
Piemont-Liguria Ocean, mainly ophiolites (fragments of the
oceanic crust of this domain); limestone deposited in shallower parts of the Piemont-Liguria ocean and turned into marble and originally deep marine
mudstones formed in the
oceanic trench that existed at the northern edge of the
Apulian plate. From the Cretaceous onward the oceanic crust of the Piemont-Liguria ocean subducted at these trenches beneath the Apulian plate.
The Piemont-Liguria Ocean and the Valais Ocean are, together with some other small oceanic basins, called ''Alpine Tethys Ocean'' or ''Western Tethys Ocean''. The
Tethys Ocean itself is sometimes considered to have begun east of the Apulian and African plates, but normally the Alpine Tethys is regarded as part of it.
Subdivision in the Eastern Alps
The following Penninic
lithologies are found in the
Hohe Tauern window and at the northern boundary of the Alps:
★ old
Precambrian and
Cambrian gneisses of continental
basement.
★ younger
Hercynic (late
Carboniferous)
granite intrusions (turned into gneisses by
deformation in the
Alpine orogeny).
★ ophiolites, often intruded by granite.
★
Triassic and
Jurassic sedimentary rocks, turned into calcareous
phyllites by metamorphosis.
Stratigraphically on top of these Cretaceous to early Tertiary
flysch deposits are found sometimes.
It is not clear which of these units can be correlated with the Penninic units of the Western Alps. Some of them are clearly Penninic, some clearly
Helvetic, and some are disputed. The oceanic trench deposits of the Penninic nappes are found through the Alps and called
Bündner slates.
What is clear at least is that the Briançonnais terrane is not found in the
Eastern Alps. The conclusion that can be drawn is that the microcontinent wedged out in the east in the Alpine Tethys Ocean. Some authors suggest the ophiolites that occur at the Hohe Tauern window must be correlated with the Piemont-Liguria terrane of the western Alps, because trench deposits such as
radiolarites occur in both.
References
★
Description of the Western and Central Alps on the website of S.M. Schmid
★
Description of the geology of Austria on the website of Christof Kuhn
★ F. Hoeck & F. Koller, 1999: ''Mesozoic Metamorphic evolution of the Tauern Window'' in Acta Montanistica Slovaca v 4, p 145