A tectonic model for hyperextension at magma-poor rifted margins: an example from the West Iberia–Newfoundland conjugate margins

2012 ◽  
Vol 369 (1) ◽  
pp. 403-427 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marta Pérez-Gussinyé
Geology ◽  
1995 ◽  
Vol 23 (7) ◽  
pp. 589 ◽  
Author(s):  
Deping Chian ◽  
Charlotte Keen ◽  
Ian Reid ◽  
Keith E. Louden

1999 ◽  
Vol 46 ◽  
pp. 161-163
Author(s):  
Carl-Henric Wahlgren ◽  
Michael B. Stephens

An important tectonic model for the Sveconorwegian orogen north and northeast of Lake Vänern, south-central Sweden, was presented by Berthelsen (1980). Both the Mylonite Zone and the frontal area of the Sveconorwegian orogen were interpreted to be related to large-scale compressional tectonics. Earlier thrusting to the west was inferred to be followed by later thrust movement to the east.


2021 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Elmar Albers ◽  
Wolfgang Bach ◽  
Marta Pérez-Gussinyé ◽  
Catherine McCammon ◽  
Thomas Frederichs

Molecular hydrogen (H2) released during serpentinization of mantle rocks is one of the main fuels for chemosynthetic life. Processes of H2 production at slow-spreading mid-ocean ridges (MORs) have received much attention in the past. Less well understood is serpentinization at passive continental margins where different rock types are involved (lherzolite instead of harzburgite/dunite at MORs) and the alteration temperatures tend to be lower (<200°C vs. >200°C). To help closing this knowledge gap we investigated drill core samples from the West Iberia margin. Lherzolitic compositions and spinel geochemistry indicate that the exhumed peridotites resemble sub-continental lithospheric mantle. The rocks are strongly serpentinized, mainly consist of serpentine with little magnetite, and are generally brucite-free. Serpentine can be uncommonly Fe-rich, with XMg = Mg/(Mg + Fe) < 0.8, and shows distinct compositional trends toward a cronstedtite endmember. Bulk rock and silicate fraction Fe(III)/∑Fe ratios are 0.6–0.92 and 0.58–0.8, respectively; our data show that 2/3 of the ferric Fe is accounted for by Fe(III)-serpentine. Mass balance and thermodynamic calculations suggest that the sample’s initial serpentinization produced ∼120 to >300 mmol H2 per kg rock. The cold, late-stage weathering of the serpentinites at the seafloor caused additional H2 formation. These results suggest that the H2 generation potential evolves during the transition from continental break-up to ultraslow and, eventually, slow MOR spreading. Metamorphic phase assemblages systematically vary between these settings, which has consequences for H2 yields during serpentinization. At magma-poor rifted margins and ultraslow-spreading MORs, serpentine hosts most Fe(III). Hydrogen yields of 120 to >300 mmol and 50–150 mmol H2 per kg rock, respectively, may be expected at temperatures of <200°C. At slow-spreading MORs, in contrast, serpentinization may produce 200–350 mmol H2, most of which is related to magnetite formation at >200°C. Since, in comparison to slow-spreading MORs, geothermal gradients at magma-poor margins and ultraslow-spreading MORs are lower, larger volumes of low-temperature serpentinite should form in these settings. Serpentinization of lherzolitic rocks at magma-poor margins should produce particularly high amounts of H2 under conditions within the habitable zone. Magma-poor margins may hence be more relevant environments for hydrogenotrophic microbial life than previously thought.


2021 ◽  
Vol 95 ◽  
pp. 29-44
Author(s):  
Simon Tomasi ◽  
Nick Kusznir ◽  
Gianreto Manatschal ◽  
Frank Despinois

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eneanwan Ekpo ◽  
David Eaton ◽  
Rajeev Nair

<p>The crystalline crust that underlies the Western Canada Sedimentary Basin in northern Alberta is composed of tectonic domains that accreted to the margin of the Archean Rae province of western Laurentia, ca. 2.1-1.9 Ga. Geophysical data indicate that the basement crust in this region hosts a vast, mid-crustal reflection sequence (Winagami Reflection Sequence) interpreted as assemblage of mafic sills and an unusually wide domain of Paleoproterozoic magmatic arcs (Taltson Magmatic Zone). The latter are interpreted to have formed during Paleoproterozoic tectonic assembly through near-synchronous closure of small oceanic basins along subduction systems of opposing polarity. Here, we introduce a new tectonic model, which postulates that the Taltson Magmatic Zone represents collated fragments that formed within a single subduction system. Comparison with modern analogs suggest that observed temporal relationships and present-day configuration of Paleoproterozoic arcs can be explained by plate-margin processes of slab rollback and back-arc rifting. Our model is consistent with re-interpreted basement-drillcore petrology, provides a genetic link for the association between magmatic arcs and the Winagami sill complex, explains an extraordinary fit between aeromagnetically defined “conjugate margins” and provides a tectonic framework for the origin of the enigmatic low<sup>-δ18</sup>O magmatic zone (Kimiwan anomaly) along the southern Chinchaga domain.</p>


Geosciences ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (5) ◽  
pp. 178
Author(s):  
Heide MacMahon ◽  
J. Kim Welford ◽  
Larry Sandoval ◽  
Alexander L. Peace

Reconstructions of the opening of the North Atlantic Ocean generally result in the Orphan Basin, offshore Newfoundland, Canada, lying approximately conjugate to the rift basins on the Irish Atlantic margin at the onset of seafloor spreading toward the end of the Early Cretaceous. Most of these plate reconstructions have involved rigid plates with plate motions based solely on the interpretation of oceanic magnetic anomalies. In particular, these reconstructions often show the Rockall Basin, west of Ireland, forming a continuous Mesozoic basin with the West Orphan Basin, offshore Newfoundland. However, more recent plate reconstructions involving deformable plates have called this conjugate relationship into question. The goal of this study is to investigate the validity of this potentially continuous basin system by reconstructing and restoring present-day seismically-constrained geological models both spatially and temporally back to their original configurations pre-rift. By comparing the reconstructions in terms of sedimentary package thicknesses and crustal thicknesses in 3D, using both rigid and deformable plate reconstructions to orient the reconstructed models, we are able to test different basin connectivity scenarios using a multidisciplinary approach. Our analysis provides subsurface geophysical support for the hypothesis that the Rockall Basin was originally conjugate to and continuous with the East Orphan Basin during Jurassic rifting, later linking to the West Orphan Basin as rifting evolved during the Early Cretaceous. This complex basin evolution example highlights the need for using 3D rifting mechanism models to properly understand the fundamental driving forces during rifting and has significant implications for assessing basin prospectivity across conjugate margin pairs.


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