The Austroalpine nappes are a geological nappe stack in the European Alps. The Alps contain three such stacks, of which the Austroalpine nappes are structurally on top of the other two (meaning they were thrusted over the other two). The name Austroalpine means Eastern Alpine, because these nappes crop out mainly in the Eastern Alps (the Alps east of the line Lake Constance - Chur – Lake Como).
Because the Austroalpine nappes consist of material from the former Apulian or Adriatic plate that was thrusted over the European plate they are called allochton nappes. In comparison with the other nappe stacks they have experienced lower grade metamorphism, which distinguishes them clearly from the Penninic nappes on which they rest.
The basement rocks have experienced metamorphism related to their original depth in the Earth’s crust, but in the Austroalpine nappes Alpine metamorphism (i.e. metamorphism related to the formation of the Alps) is fairly low grade to non-existent. The basement rocks can be greenschist facies to amphibolite facies, depending on their original depth. They are Paleozoic schists and (para-)gneisses intruded by granites of Variscan and Tertiary age.
On top of this basement Permian and Mesozoic sedimentary and volcanic rocks were deposited. Shallow marine limestones are abundant, these limestones now form the mountain chains of the northern part of the Eastern Alps, which are therefore together called the Northern Calcareous Alps. Sometimes the limestone has been turned into dolomite, as in the Austrian region Salzkammergut and the German region Allgäu.
A special unit is the greywacke zone, a band of Paleozoic metamorphosed sedimentary rocks that forms an east-west band through the Austrian Alps. The greywacke zone crops out between the Mesozoic rocks of the Northern Calcareous Alps and the Austroalpine and Penninic basement rocks of the Central Eastern Alps. Stratigraphically the greywacke zone can be up to 2 km thick.
All of these lithologies were folded and thrusted, so that the basement can be found on top of the sediments and vice versa.
On the other hand, in Austria the Austroalpine nappes cover the largest part of that country, except for a few windows like the Hohe Tauern window and the Engadin window.
The Eo-Alpine phase is sometimes seen as the earliest phase of the Alpine orogeny. However, after the initial mountain building the tectonic plates moved away from each other. The next phase was more than 50 Ma later, so the events are often seen as unrelated.
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