East African Fracture Zones: a long lifespan since the breakup of Gondwana
International audience Gondwana splitting started during the Early Jurassic (ca. 180 Ma) with the separation of Antarctica and Madagascar from Africa, followed by the separation of South America and Africa during the Middle Jurassic. Thanks to recent seismic profiles for petroleum exploration, the a...
Main Authors: | , , , , , , , |
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Other Authors: | , , , , , , , , , |
Format: | Conference Object |
Language: | English |
Published: |
HAL CCSD
2022
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Subjects: | |
Online Access: | https://insu.hal.science/insu-03693914 https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu22-12463 |
Summary: | International audience Gondwana splitting started during the Early Jurassic (ca. 180 Ma) with the separation of Antarctica and Madagascar from Africa, followed by the separation of South America and Africa during the Middle Jurassic. Thanks to recent seismic profiles for petroleum exploration, the architecture of rifted margins and the transform faults zones, which developed as a result of the relative motion between tectonic plates have been recently evidenced and studied along the whole eastern and south-eastern Africa (i.e., in the Western Somali Basin, the Mozambique Basin, the Natal Basin, and the Outeniqua Basin). Yet, the structure and overall kinematic evolution of the three major transform faults zones together – i.e., the Agulhas, the Davie, and the Limpopo Fracture Zones – that control the opening of these major oceanic basins remain poorly studied. The interpretation of an extensive regional multichannel seismic dataset coupled with recent studies allows us to propose an accurate regional mapping of the crustal domains and major structural elements along the rifted margins along the whole eastern and south-eastern Africa. We provide new constraints on the structuration and evolution of these three transform systems. Although our findings indicate common features in transform style (e.g., a right-lateral transform system, a wide sheared corridor), the deformation and the thermal regime along these systems appear quite different. In particular, we show that the Davie and Agulhas Fracture Zones recorded spectacular inversions during the transform stage whereas transtensional deformation is observed along the Limpopo Fracture Zone during its activity. This suggests that faults activity controls vertical displacements along transform margins, minimising other processes such as thermal exchanges between the oceanic and continental lithospheres across the transform fault and flexural behaviour of the lithosphere. This different style of deformation may be explained by two main forcing parameters: (i) the ... |
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