Continental Rifted Margins 1. Gwenn Peron-Pinvidic

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Continental Rifted Margins 1 - Gwenn Peron-Pinvidic


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called overlapping structures. These are called relay zones, transfer zones or accommodation zones, depending on the geometrical characteristics of the structural connection between the faults (Figure 1.27). Each zone is characterized by special structural features: relay ramps form in relay zones between synthetic faults, transfer faults are oriented perpendicular to the overlapping faults and usually display strike-slip displacement (not to be confused with transfer zones), en-échelon faults are series of faults lying oblique to the overall structural trend and organized in a series of parallel or subparallel, overlapping or step-like faults.

Schematic illustration of the possible complex geometries developed during extension and fault basin migration interaction linkage.

      The way faults are organized and linked in an extensional setting is related to the way normal faults grow (see section 3.2) (Childs et al. 2017; Rotevatn et al. 2019).

       – General: (Kingston et al. 1983; Leeder and Gawthorpe 1987; Leeder and Jackson 1993; Gawthorpe and Leeder 2000; Cowie et al. 2005; Childs et al. 2017; Rotevatn et al. 2019).

       – For detailed explanations of basin analysis, we recommend the necessary (Allen and Allen 2013).

      Subsidence is the stage that leads to the progressive deepening of the basin floor and hence allows the accumulation of sediments in rift basins. It is the process by which the lithosphere regains isostatic equilibrium. Accommodation or accommodation space refers to the amount of space available for sediments and/or magmatic material to accumulate.

      On rifted continental margins, three main types of mechanisms can contribute to subsidence:

      1 1) Extension: the continental crust stretching leads to the formation of faults whose activity generates topographic depressions by the downward movement of the hanging walls. This is the initial tectonic subsidence and is a syn-rift stage.

      2 2) Thermal cooling: with time, rifted margins get wider. As the rift axis moves away, the thinned lithosphere also becomes colder and denser, promoting further subsidence. Additionally, during lithospheric stretching, the underlying asthenosphere naturally rises underneath the rift axis. With time, the warm asthenosphere progressively cools into mantle lithosphere, a process occurring over many tens of millions of years. From these two processes, the lithospheric plate thickens until the thermally defined lithosphere–asthenosphere boundary regains its initial depth. Because lithospheric mantle is denser than asthenospheric mantle, this cooling process also induces subsidence in the rifted margin. The entire process is called thermal subsidence.

      3 3) Loading, sedimentary or volcanic: additional subsidence is caused by the sediment/volcanic load and/or the weight of the water that fills the accommodation space of the rift zone. This is a process that is present at all rifting stages. The emplacement of large volumes of hot magma in the extending system can influence the uplift–subsidence curve of the basin, depending on the volume and the rate of their emplacement (Royden and Keen 1980).

      Additional mechanisms may also influence subsidence curves, like asthenospheric mantle flow. The asthenospheric mantle is in constant motion, due to convection caused by thermal or density gradients: hot mantle material rises, cools and then sinks in convection cells. Based on this, strictly speaking, very few places on Earth are actually in perfect “isostatic equilibrium” at geological scales (Watts 2001). Mantle convection is known to produce large-wavelength dynamic topography in the lithosphere, but even small-scale convection cells can impact local basin subsidence (Braun 2010; Petersen et al. 2010).

      Further reading.– The above descriptions are abbreviated and often simplified. If interested in reading and learning further, the reader is referred to the following list of publications and references:

       – General: (McKenzie 1978; Bott 1979; White et al. 1987; White and McKenzie 1989; Kusznir and Ziegler 1992; Xie and Heller 2009; Allen and Allen 2013).

Schematic illustration of tectonic subsidence curves for various types of basins around the world.

       1.5.1. Sediments

      Sedimentation, although always present in rift basins, is extremely variable from one system to the other. It mainly depends on the surrounding geography (morphology) and lithological and climatic parameters. For detailed information regarding the processes related to these parameters, the reader is referred


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