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1 1Department of Earth Sciences, Uppsala University, Villavägen 16, S-752 36 Uppsala, Sweden
2 2Urals Geological Survey Expedition, 55 Veinera., Ekaterinburg, Sverdlovsk District 620014, Russia
3 3Institute of Geophysics, ETH-Hönggerberg, Zürich CH-8093, Switzerland
Abstract: A new compilation of deep seismic reflection data, in combination with the results of recent geological and isotopic investigations, provides the basis for significantly refined structural and evolutionary models of the Middle Urals. Many of the major structural boundaries observed at the surface (e.g. Main Uralian Thrust, Main Uralian Normal Fault, SerovMauk Fault, Prianitchnikova Shear Zone) can be followed on the seismic reflection data to depths of 815 km. Only a few features can be traced through the horizontal to shallow dipping zones of middle-crustal reflectivity that extend beneath much of the Middle Urals. Exceptions might be the Deevo Thrust and a newly discovered deep band of moderately dipping reflections beneath the West Siberian Basin that may represent the remnants of an ancient subduction zone. The reflectivity of the lower crust and Moho are similar beneath the hinterland of the Urals and below the western part of the West Siberian Basin, suggesting that in both places they have the same extensional origin. Accretion of various exotic terranes to the eastern margin of Baltica during Late Palaeozoic time involved considerable shortening of the continental margin. The accreted terranes (e.g. Tagil, Petrokamensk and Alapaevsk Arc Complexes) consist mostly of island-arc material formed during Mid- and Late Palaeozoic time. Closely associated with the island arcs are several high-grade metamorphic complexes (e.g. Salda and MurzinkaAdui Complexes) that were exhumed during and after Late Palaeozoic convergence. Towards the end of the orogeny, several northsouth-trending strike-slip faults (e.g. Sisert Fault) were active. After the orogeny, major periods of tectonism and magmatism in the Middle Urals resulted in the extrusion of the Siberian trap basalts, crustal stretching and/or underplating, and the formation of the West Siberian Basin, the planets largest intracontinental sedimentary basin. Finally, a period of renewed thrust faulting, often reactivating older faults, led to the inversion of the Mesozoic basins.
Keywords: Uralide Orogen, West Siberian Basin, Palaeozoic, Mesozoic, seismic profiling.
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