scholarly journals Tracing the HIMU component within Pan-African lithosphere beneath northeast Africa: Evidence from Late Cretaceous Natash alkaline volcanics, Egypt

Lithos ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 300-301 ◽  
pp. 136-153 ◽  
Author(s):  
M.A. Abu El-Rus ◽  
G. Chazot ◽  
R. Vannucci ◽  
J.-L. Paquette
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Christian Weidle ◽  
Lars Wiesenberg ◽  
Andreas Scharf ◽  
Philippe Agard ◽  
Amr El-Sharkawy ◽  
...  

<p>The Semail Ophiolite is the world<span>‘</span>s largest and best exposed oceanic lithosphere on land and a primary reference site for studies of creation of oceanic lithosphere, initiation of subduction, geodynamic models of obduction, subduction and exhumation of continental rocks during obduction. Five decades of geological mapping, structural, petrological and geochronological research provide a robust understanding of the geodynamic evolution of the shallow continental crust in northern Oman and how the late Cretaceous obduction process largely shaped the present-day landscape. Yet, prior to obduction, other first-order tectonic processes have left their imprint in the lithosphere, in particular the Neoproterozoic accretion of Arabia and Permian breakup of Pangea. Due to the scarcity of deep structure imaging below the ophiolite, the presence and significance of inherited structures for the obduction process remain unclear.</p><p>We discuss a new 3-D anisotropic shear wave velocity model of the crust below northern Oman derived from ambient noise tomography and Receiver Function analysis which allows to <span>resolve</span> some key unknowns in geodynamics of eastern Arabia: (1) <span>Several NE-trending structural boundaries in the middle and lower crust are attributed to the Pan-African orogeny and align with first-order lateral changes in surface geology and topography.</span> (2) The well-known Semail Gap Fault Zone is an upper crustal feature whereas two other deep crustal faults are newly identified. (3) Permian rifting occurred on both eastern and northern margins but large-scale mafic intrusions and/or underplating occurred only in the east. (4) While obduction is inherently lithospheric by nature, its effects <span>are mostly observed at shallow crustal depths, and lateral variations in its geometry and dynamics can be explained by effects on pre-existing Pan-African and Permian structures. (5) Continental subduction and exhumation during late Cretaceous obduction may be the cause for crustal thickening below today‘s topography.</span> (6) Thinning of the continental lithosphere below northern Oman in late Eocene times – possibly related to thermal effects of the incipient Afar mantle plume - provides a plausible mechanism for the broad emergence of the Oman Mountains and in particular the Jabal Akhdar Dome. Uplift might thus be unrelated to compressional tectonics during Arabia-Eurasia convergence as previously believed.</p>


1990 ◽  
Vol 172 (3-4) ◽  
pp. 372-373
Author(s):  
D.R. Hunter
Keyword(s):  

Author(s):  
A. Kröner ◽  
R. Grieling ◽  
T. Reischmann ◽  
I. M. Hussein ◽  
R. J. Stern ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Noudiedie Kamgang Julie Agathe ◽  
Tcheumenak Kouémo Jules ◽  
Kagou Dongmo Armand ◽  
Fozing Éric Martial ◽  
Choumélé Kana Styve Cliff ◽  
...  

The Cameroon Line (CL) appears as a SW-NE straight line characterized by an intense volcanic activity of basaltic composition with alkaline plutonic complexes, including the Nlonako ring complex (NRC) emplaced in the southern part of the CL. Many hypotheses have been proposed to explain the origin and petrogenetic evolution of these complexes but very few of these works focus or attempt to propose their structural emplacement model, though structural data recorded by them can permit such studies. Using petrographic, structural data and space images, we propose an emplacement model of the NRC and other ring complexes along the CL. The NRC is a ring complex of 10 km diameter slightly elongated in the NNE-SSW direction mainly composed of plutonites among which syenites, gabbros, diorites and biotite-amphibole granites, and a few volcanites made up of rhyolites and basalts occurring as veins or boulders in syenites. This complex was emplaced as sill intrusive body within Pan-African k-feldspars megacrysts granites and gneiss host rocks under fractures control. These fractures developed as result of stress release consecutive to the readjustment of the crust during and after the late Cretaceous general extension, therefore facilitating the upwelling of the mantle plume and the generation of magma that vertically uplift. The progressive magmatic pressure decreases after the NRC emplacement in addition to conjugated fractures networks developed at superficial crust level finally lead to the cauldron subsidence of the NRC summit. This subsidence was facilitated by the downward sliding of rocks along the WNW-ESE fault, finally leading to the formation of a caldera at the summit of the NRC. The NRC and other anorogenic complexes aligned along the CL are located in a tension gash form by the Cretaceous sinistral activation of the N70E Adamawa fault. This left lateral wrench movements developed a tension gash, overprinted on pre-existing transcurrent mega-faults with as result, the development of "en-echelon" fractures. Stress release during the late Cretaceous general extensional phase probably accelerated the uplift of magmas and emplacement of ring complexes along the "en-echelon" regional fractures in an extensional setting during the Tertiary (60 - 30 Ma). This therefore explained the alignment of anorogenic complexes along the N30E CL corridor that are highly correlated to lineament networks and Pan-African megafaults


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Dia Ninkabou ◽  
Philippe Agard ◽  
Charlotte Nielsen ◽  
Jeroen Smit ◽  
Bilal Haq ◽  
...  

<p>The offshore north Oman margin, located north of the Hajar Mountains in the Gulf of Oman,<br>remains a key area for understanding the evolution of the obduction Emails Ophiolite. With the<br>help of a grid of 2D-multichannel seismic lines linked to well data, we present a new view of<br>the obduction and post-obduction history of the Oman margin. Offshore deposits, overlying on<br>what we interpret as being the offshore extension of the ophiolites, can be divided into two<br>mega-sequences. The older one is comprised of late Cretaceous to Paleogene deposits mainly<br>located in the Sohar basin and offshore of the Abat trough. In the Sohar basin, the latest stages<br>of obduction are recorded by the deposition of the erosional products of the Autochthonous<br>Arabian sediments and the ophiolite, in a flexural basin induced by a volcanic high. Offshore<br>of the Abat trough, a Maastrichtian-Paleocene basin develops above a detachment fault<br>system linked to the extension phase associated to the exhumation/expulsion of the subducted<br>continental margin. Both sectors are divided by a structured high located offshore of the Semail<br>Gap transfer fault. We propose that this transfer fault, likely a major Pan-African structure,<br>impacted both the architecture of the passive margin following the rifting of the Neotethys and<br>later ophiolite emplacement, during (continental) subduction and obduction.</p>


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