The Skytrain plate and tectonic evolution of southwest Gondwana since Jurassic times

Uncertainty about the structure of the Falkland Plateau Basin has long hindered understanding of tectonic evolution in southwest Gondwana. New aeromagnetic data from the basin reveal Jurassic-onset seafloor spreading by motion of a single newly-recognized plate, Skytrain, which also governed contine...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Published in:Scientific Reports
Main Authors: Eagles, Graeme, Eisermann, Hannes
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://epic.awi.de/id/eprint/53297/
https://epic.awi.de/id/eprint/53297/1/Eagles_Eisermann_2020_SREP_Skytrain.pdf
https://hdl.handle.net/10013/epic.c454da5f-4cba-4d5e-9add-224b1dce0752
https://hdl.handle.net/
Description
Summary:Uncertainty about the structure of the Falkland Plateau Basin has long hindered understanding of tectonic evolution in southwest Gondwana. New aeromagnetic data from the basin reveal Jurassic-onset seafloor spreading by motion of a single newly-recognized plate, Skytrain, which also governed continental extension in the Weddell Sea Embayment and possibly further afield in Antarctica. The Skytrain plate resolves a nearly century-old controversy by requiring a South American setting for the Falkland Islands in Gondwana. The Skytrain plate’s later motion provides a unifying context for post-Cambrian wide-angle paleomagnetic rotation, Cretaceous uplift, and post-Permian oblique collision in the Ellsworth Mountains of Antarctica. Further north, the Skytrain plate’s margins built a continuous conjugate ocean to the Weddell Sea in the Falkland Plateau Basin and central Scotia Sea. This ocean rules out venerable correlation-based interpretations for a Pacific margin location and subsequent long-distance translation of the South Georgia microcontinent as the Drake Passage gateway opened.