Asia •
Ganges Basin • Pro-foreland to the south of the
Himalaya, in northern India and
Pakistan • Began to form 65 million years ago during the collision of India and Eurasia • Filled with a sedimentary succession more than 12 km thick •
Northern Tarim Basin • Pro-foreland to the south of the
Tian Shan • Formed initially during the Late
Paleozoic, during the
Carboniferous and
Devonian • Rejuvenated during the
Cenozoic as a result of far field stress associated with the India-Eurasia collision and the renewed uplift of the Tian Shan • Thickest sedimentary section is beneath
Kashgar, where Cenozoic sediment is more than 10,000 metres thick •
Southern Junggar Basin • Retro-foreland to the north of the
Tian Shan • Formed initially during the Late Paleozoic and rejuvenated during the Cenozoic • Thickest sedimentary section is west of
Urumqi, where
Mesozoic sediment is more than 8,000 metres thick
Middle East •
Persian Gulf • Foreland to the west of the Zagros Mountains • Underfilled stage • Terrestrial part of the basin covers parts of Iraq and Kuwait
Europe •
North Alpine Basin (the Molasse Basin) • Peripheral foreland basin to the north of the
Alps, in Austria, Switzerland, Germany and France. • Formed during the
Palaeocene to
Neogene (65.5–2.6 Ma) convergence and collision between
Eurasia and the
Adriatic Plate • Complications arise in the formation of the
Rhine Graben •
Po Basin, northern Italy. • Retro-foreland basin of the Western and Central Southern Alps and pro-foreland of the Northern Apennines. It developed through extensional phases followed by compressional stages. Its compressional architecture is overprinted on the inherited extensional framework. • The compressional architecture "developed intermittently at the front of two different mountain chains, the Northern Apennines and the Southern Alps, progressively converging one towards the other." • There were two extensional cycles: a) Eastward pre-rift extension cycles culminating in the Anisian to Carnian (middle to early late Triassic, 247–227 Ma) cycle formation of the
carbonate platform and basin system; b) Late Triassic–Liassic syn-rift extension phases related to the
Piedmont-Liguria and
Ionian oceanic basin spreading. After this the maximum basin widening and deepening was reached with progressive formation of the Lombardian, Belluno, and Adriatic carbonate basins. • It is separated from the Central Western Alps and its foreland (the Po foreland basin) by the
Lessini and Berici Mountains and Euganei Hills structural high, a relatively undeformed foreland block. • Flexure began in the Late Cretaceous with an E-ward faint bending due to the build-up of the External Dinaric thrust belt. There followed two main depositional/flexure cycles: a) the Chattian-Langhian cycle (Late Oligocene-Middle Eocene, 28–14 Ma) with a weak northward bending that accommodated sediments mainly from the uplifted and eroded axial sector of the Alps; b) the Serravallian-Early Messinian cycle (Middle to Late Miocene) with a NNW-ward prominent bending due to quick uplift of the Southern Alps. In the Pliocene-Pleistocene only the south-western-most part (southern part of the Veneto Basin) bent towards SW as result of the Northern Apennines build-up. • Formed by two
orogenies, the
Dinarides orogeny (Latest Cretaceous, 75–66 Ma to Eocene, 56–34 Ma) and
Apennine orogeny (Miocene to Pliocene (23–2.6 Ma). It is connected to the Po Basin. •
Foreland basins of the Carpathian Mountains •
Carpathian Foredeep • Continuation of North Alpine Molasse Basin to the
Western Carpathians, located in southern
Poland and western
Ukraine. •
East Carpathian Foreland Basin • The foreland basin of the
Eastern Carpathians which extends through southern Poland, western Ukraine, Moldova and Romania and is 800 km long. In the late Miocene to early Pliocene it was an important sediment supplier to the Dacian Basin and the Black Sea. •
Dacian Basin • This is a foreland basin by the Romanian section of the Eastern Carpathians and the Southern Carpathians (also in Romania). It is a post-collisional basin which developed in the Messinian to Pliocene (7–2.6 Ma). Initially the sedimentation from this basin was mostly just in a pre-existent foredeep area. Subsequently it extended southward over the northern part of the
Moesian Platform and a part of the Scythian platform. •
Ebro Basin • Peripheral foreland basin to the south of the
Pyrenees, in northern Spain • Substantial deformation of the foreland basin has occurred in the north, exemplified by the foreland
fold and thrust belt in the western
Catalan province. The basin is well known for the spectacular exposures of syn- and post-tectonic sediment strata due to the peculiar drainage evolution of the basin. •
Guadalquivir Basin • Formed during the Neogene north of the
Betic Cordillera (southern Spain), on a Hercynian basement. •
Aquitaine Basin • Retro-foreland basin to the north of the Pyrenees, in southern France
North America •
Western Canadian Sedimentary Basin • Foreland to the east of the Rocky Mountains,
Alberta South America •
Andean foreland basins •
Caguán-Putumayo Basin •
Cesar-Ranchería Basin •
Llanos Basin •
Magallanes Basin •
Marañón Basin •
Middle Magdalena Valley •
Neuquén Basin •
Oriente Basin •
Ucayali Basin •
Upper Magdalena Valley ==Ancient foreland basin systems==