Sedimentological propertiesFlysch consists of repeated sedimentary cycles with upwards fining of the sediments. At the bottom of each cycle are sometimes coarse conglomerates or breccias, which gradually evolve upwards into sandstone and shale/claystone. Typically the shales don't contain many fossils, the coarser sandstones often have fractions of micas ans glauconite. Flysch is formed under deep marine circumstances, in a quite and low-energetic depostional environment. The coarser layers (which require higher energy) are disruptions in these circumstances, caused by pulsewise flows of mass transport from the forming orogenic wedge. In many cases the mass transports are represented in the record by turbidites. TectonicsFlysch deposits form at convergent plate boundaries at the stage of continental collision, often in remnant ocean basins that exist along the same boundary. The sedimental material in the flysch is derived from the forming mountains and deposited along the axis of the new mountain chain into remnant ocean basin. The same ocean basin is in the process of subducting under the orogenic wedge. As subduction continues, the flysch sediments are scraped off the down-going oceanic plate and are accreted onto the orogenic wedge. As a result, flysch deposits are often highly deformed by thrust faulting and folding. Name and useThe name flysch was introduced in geologic literature by Swiss geologist Bernhard Studer in 1827. Studer used the term for the typical alternations of sandstone and shale in the foreland of the Alps. The name comes from the German word fliessen, which means to flow, because Studer thought flysch was deposited by rivers. The insight that flysch is actually a deep marine sediment typical for a particular plate tectonic setting came only much later.[1] The name flysch is currently used in many mountain chains belonging to the Alpine belt. Well-known flysch deposits are found in the forelands of the Pyrenees and Carpathians and in tectonically similar regions in Italy, the Balkans and on Cyprus. In the northern Alps, the Flysch is also a lithostratigraphic unit. References
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