Bransfield Basin tectonic evolution.

6 pages, 5 figures Bransfield Basin is located at the Pacific margin of the Antarctic Peninsula and constitutes an incipient oceanic back-arc basin. This basin developed as a consequence of the separation of the South Shetland Block from the Antarctic Peninsula. Analysis of multichannel seismic prof...

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Main Authors: Galindo Zaldívar, Jesús, Gamboa, Luiz, Maldonado, Andrés, Nakao, Seizo, Bochu, Yao
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Springer 2006
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10261/18861
https://doi.org/10.1007/3-540-32934-X
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spelling ftcsic:oai:digital.csic.es:10261/18861 2024-02-11T09:57:34+01:00 Bransfield Basin tectonic evolution. Galindo Zaldívar, Jesús Gamboa, Luiz Maldonado, Andrés Nakao, Seizo Bochu, Yao 2006 10752 bytes application/octet-stream http://hdl.handle.net/10261/18861 https://doi.org/10.1007/3-540-32934-X en eng Springer http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/3-540-32934-X Bransfield Basin Tectonic Evolution 243-248 (2006) 978-3-540-30673-3 http://hdl.handle.net/10261/18861 doi:10.1007/3-540-32934-X none artículo http://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_6501 2006 ftcsic https://doi.org/10.1007/3-540-32934-X 2024-01-16T09:24:31Z 6 pages, 5 figures Bransfield Basin is located at the Pacific margin of the Antarctic Peninsula and constitutes an incipient oceanic back-arc basin. This basin developed as a consequence of the separation of the South Shetland Block from the Antarctic Peninsula. Analysis of multichannel seismic profiles from Brazilian, Spanish, Japanese and Chinese cruises allows the shallow structure of the Bransfield Basin and its eastward prolongation through the South Scotia Ridge to be studied. The Bransfield Basin is asymmetrical and taking into account the shallow structures, its opening may be interpreted as related to a low angle normal fault that dips NW, with the South Shetland Block constituting the hanging wall. The margin adjacent to the Antarctic Peninsula exhibits all the features associated with a lower plate passive margin, such as the development of landward tilted half-grabens, the presence of a break-up unconformity, and the deposition of an oceanward dipping “drift” sequence. However, the margin near the South Shetland Islands is typical of an upper-plate margin: poorly nourished, sharp and with high angle faults. Extension is more developed in the Central Bransfield Basin, where a volcanic axis is recognized as the expression of a young spreading center, and there is possibly incipient oceanic crust. In the Bransfield Basin extremities, present-day deposits represent the synrift sequence, and extension continues. The Bransfield Basin probably develops as a consequence of two interacting processes. The main one is rollback of the trench hinge related to the continued sinking of the subducted slab of the former Phoenix Plate. A second process is related to the westwards propagation of the deformations associated with the Scotia-Antarctic plate boundary along the South Scotia Ridge and up to the Bransfield Basin. The comments of Dr. G. Eagles and Dr. K. Birkenmajer have improved this contribution. Spain’s CICYT supported this research through Project ANT99-0817 and REN2001- 2143/ANT and Brazil, through ... Article in Journal/Newspaper Antarc* Antarctic Antarctic Peninsula South Shetland Islands Digital.CSIC (Spanish National Research Council) Antarctic Antarctic Peninsula Birkenmajer ENVELOPE(-58.405,-58.405,-62.068,-62.068) Pacific South Scotia Ridge ENVELOPE(-46.500,-46.500,-60.000,-60.000) South Shetland Islands The Antarctic Berlin, Heidelberg
institution Open Polar
collection Digital.CSIC (Spanish National Research Council)
op_collection_id ftcsic
language English
description 6 pages, 5 figures Bransfield Basin is located at the Pacific margin of the Antarctic Peninsula and constitutes an incipient oceanic back-arc basin. This basin developed as a consequence of the separation of the South Shetland Block from the Antarctic Peninsula. Analysis of multichannel seismic profiles from Brazilian, Spanish, Japanese and Chinese cruises allows the shallow structure of the Bransfield Basin and its eastward prolongation through the South Scotia Ridge to be studied. The Bransfield Basin is asymmetrical and taking into account the shallow structures, its opening may be interpreted as related to a low angle normal fault that dips NW, with the South Shetland Block constituting the hanging wall. The margin adjacent to the Antarctic Peninsula exhibits all the features associated with a lower plate passive margin, such as the development of landward tilted half-grabens, the presence of a break-up unconformity, and the deposition of an oceanward dipping “drift” sequence. However, the margin near the South Shetland Islands is typical of an upper-plate margin: poorly nourished, sharp and with high angle faults. Extension is more developed in the Central Bransfield Basin, where a volcanic axis is recognized as the expression of a young spreading center, and there is possibly incipient oceanic crust. In the Bransfield Basin extremities, present-day deposits represent the synrift sequence, and extension continues. The Bransfield Basin probably develops as a consequence of two interacting processes. The main one is rollback of the trench hinge related to the continued sinking of the subducted slab of the former Phoenix Plate. A second process is related to the westwards propagation of the deformations associated with the Scotia-Antarctic plate boundary along the South Scotia Ridge and up to the Bransfield Basin. The comments of Dr. G. Eagles and Dr. K. Birkenmajer have improved this contribution. Spain’s CICYT supported this research through Project ANT99-0817 and REN2001- 2143/ANT and Brazil, through ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Galindo Zaldívar, Jesús
Gamboa, Luiz
Maldonado, Andrés
Nakao, Seizo
Bochu, Yao
spellingShingle Galindo Zaldívar, Jesús
Gamboa, Luiz
Maldonado, Andrés
Nakao, Seizo
Bochu, Yao
Bransfield Basin tectonic evolution.
author_facet Galindo Zaldívar, Jesús
Gamboa, Luiz
Maldonado, Andrés
Nakao, Seizo
Bochu, Yao
author_sort Galindo Zaldívar, Jesús
title Bransfield Basin tectonic evolution.
title_short Bransfield Basin tectonic evolution.
title_full Bransfield Basin tectonic evolution.
title_fullStr Bransfield Basin tectonic evolution.
title_full_unstemmed Bransfield Basin tectonic evolution.
title_sort bransfield basin tectonic evolution.
publisher Springer
publishDate 2006
url http://hdl.handle.net/10261/18861
https://doi.org/10.1007/3-540-32934-X
long_lat ENVELOPE(-58.405,-58.405,-62.068,-62.068)
ENVELOPE(-46.500,-46.500,-60.000,-60.000)
geographic Antarctic
Antarctic Peninsula
Birkenmajer
Pacific
South Scotia Ridge
South Shetland Islands
The Antarctic
geographic_facet Antarctic
Antarctic Peninsula
Birkenmajer
Pacific
South Scotia Ridge
South Shetland Islands
The Antarctic
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctic Peninsula
South Shetland Islands
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctic Peninsula
South Shetland Islands
op_relation http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/3-540-32934-X
Bransfield Basin Tectonic Evolution 243-248 (2006)
978-3-540-30673-3
http://hdl.handle.net/10261/18861
doi:10.1007/3-540-32934-X
op_rights none
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1007/3-540-32934-X
op_publisher_place Berlin, Heidelberg
_version_ 1790593112378179584