Evolution of the Late Cretaceous crust in the equatorial region of the Northern Indian Ocean and its implication in understanding the plate kinematics

Analysis of 3100 km of newly acquired marine magnetic data, constrained by satellite and shipborne free air gravity anomalies, in the corridor between the 86°E fracture zone (FZ) and Ninetyeast Ridge, north of the equator reveals the evolutionary history of the Late Cretaceous crust characterized by...

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Main Authors: Desa, M., Ramana, M.V., Ramprasad, T.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: The Royal Astronomical Society 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:http://drs.nio.org/drs/handle/2264/3352
id ftnio:oai:dsr.nio.org:2264/3352
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spelling ftnio:oai:dsr.nio.org:2264/3352 2023-05-15T13:59:28+02:00 Evolution of the Late Cretaceous crust in the equatorial region of the Northern Indian Ocean and its implication in understanding the plate kinematics Desa, M. Ramana, M.V. Ramprasad, T. 2009 http://drs.nio.org/drs/handle/2264/3352 en eng The Royal Astronomical Society Copyright [2009]. All efforts have been made to respect the copyright to the best of our knowledge. Inadvertent omissions, if brought to our notice, stand for correction and withdrawal of document from this repository. gravity anomalies magnetic anomalies fracture zones crustal structure Journal Article 2009 ftnio 2012-08-25T20:09:08Z Analysis of 3100 km of newly acquired marine magnetic data, constrained by satellite and shipborne free air gravity anomalies, in the corridor between the 86°E fracture zone (FZ) and Ninetyeast Ridge, north of the equator reveals the evolutionary history of the Late Cretaceous crust characterized by anomaly 34 through 31 (83.5-68.7Ma) under complex tectonic settings. Seafloor spreading model studies suggest that the crust, particularly between the chrons 33R and 33 (79.0-73.6 Ma), was formed with variable and slightly higher half-spreading rates (4.8-7.1 cm yr sup(-1)) than the crust of similar age either in the regions west of 86 degrees E FZ or east of the Ninetyeast Ridge or the Southern Crozet Basin. Further, the interpretation of magnetic anomalies suggests the presence of fossil spreading ridge segments and extra oceanic crust on the Indian plate that has been transferred from the Antarctica plate by discrete southward ridge jumps. These ridge jumps are caused by thermal instability of the spreading centre as the Indian plate moved northward over the Kerguelen mantle plume. The present study indicates that the spreading ridge-plume interaction is the prime mechanism for these ridge jumps, which have occurred since 75.8 Ma. The newly identified magnetic anomalies 34 through 31 and the inferred approx. N3 degrees E trending FZs refined the plate reconstruction models for that period Article in Journal/Newspaper Antarc* Antarctica National Institute of Oceanography, India: Digital Repository Service (DRS@nio) Kerguelen Indian The Corridor ENVELOPE(78.139,78.139,-68.582,-68.582)
institution Open Polar
collection National Institute of Oceanography, India: Digital Repository Service (DRS@nio)
op_collection_id ftnio
language English
topic gravity anomalies
magnetic anomalies
fracture zones
crustal structure
spellingShingle gravity anomalies
magnetic anomalies
fracture zones
crustal structure
Desa, M.
Ramana, M.V.
Ramprasad, T.
Evolution of the Late Cretaceous crust in the equatorial region of the Northern Indian Ocean and its implication in understanding the plate kinematics
topic_facet gravity anomalies
magnetic anomalies
fracture zones
crustal structure
description Analysis of 3100 km of newly acquired marine magnetic data, constrained by satellite and shipborne free air gravity anomalies, in the corridor between the 86°E fracture zone (FZ) and Ninetyeast Ridge, north of the equator reveals the evolutionary history of the Late Cretaceous crust characterized by anomaly 34 through 31 (83.5-68.7Ma) under complex tectonic settings. Seafloor spreading model studies suggest that the crust, particularly between the chrons 33R and 33 (79.0-73.6 Ma), was formed with variable and slightly higher half-spreading rates (4.8-7.1 cm yr sup(-1)) than the crust of similar age either in the regions west of 86 degrees E FZ or east of the Ninetyeast Ridge or the Southern Crozet Basin. Further, the interpretation of magnetic anomalies suggests the presence of fossil spreading ridge segments and extra oceanic crust on the Indian plate that has been transferred from the Antarctica plate by discrete southward ridge jumps. These ridge jumps are caused by thermal instability of the spreading centre as the Indian plate moved northward over the Kerguelen mantle plume. The present study indicates that the spreading ridge-plume interaction is the prime mechanism for these ridge jumps, which have occurred since 75.8 Ma. The newly identified magnetic anomalies 34 through 31 and the inferred approx. N3 degrees E trending FZs refined the plate reconstruction models for that period
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Desa, M.
Ramana, M.V.
Ramprasad, T.
author_facet Desa, M.
Ramana, M.V.
Ramprasad, T.
author_sort Desa, M.
title Evolution of the Late Cretaceous crust in the equatorial region of the Northern Indian Ocean and its implication in understanding the plate kinematics
title_short Evolution of the Late Cretaceous crust in the equatorial region of the Northern Indian Ocean and its implication in understanding the plate kinematics
title_full Evolution of the Late Cretaceous crust in the equatorial region of the Northern Indian Ocean and its implication in understanding the plate kinematics
title_fullStr Evolution of the Late Cretaceous crust in the equatorial region of the Northern Indian Ocean and its implication in understanding the plate kinematics
title_full_unstemmed Evolution of the Late Cretaceous crust in the equatorial region of the Northern Indian Ocean and its implication in understanding the plate kinematics
title_sort evolution of the late cretaceous crust in the equatorial region of the northern indian ocean and its implication in understanding the plate kinematics
publisher The Royal Astronomical Society
publishDate 2009
url http://drs.nio.org/drs/handle/2264/3352
long_lat ENVELOPE(78.139,78.139,-68.582,-68.582)
geographic Kerguelen
Indian
The Corridor
geographic_facet Kerguelen
Indian
The Corridor
genre Antarc*
Antarctica
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctica
op_rights Copyright [2009]. All efforts have been made to respect the copyright to the best of our knowledge. Inadvertent omissions, if brought to our notice, stand for correction and withdrawal of document from this repository.
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