Krawczyk, Charlotte M. et al. (1996): Evidence for detachment tectonics on the Iberia abyssal plain rifted margin

Leg/Site/Hole:
ODP 149
ODP 149 898
ODP 149 901
Identifier:
2007-088119
georefid

10.2973/odp.proc.sr.149.244.1996
doi

Creator:
Krawczyk, Charlotte M.
Kiel University, Geomar Research Centre for Marine Geoscience, Kiel, Federal Republic of Germany
author

Reston, T. J.
Rice University, United States
author

Beslier, Marie-Odile
Ocean Drilling Program, United States
author

Boillot, G.
Universite Pierre et Marie Curie, France
author

Identification:
Evidence for detachment tectonics on the Iberia abyssal plain rifted margin
1996
In: Whitmarsh, Robert B., Sawyer, Dale S., Klaus, Adam, Beslier, Marie-Odile, Collins, Eric S., Comas, Maria Carmen, Cornen, Guy, de Kaenel, Eric, Pinheiro, Luis de Menezes, Gervais, Elisabeth, Gibson, Ian L., Harry, Dennis L., Hobart, Michael A., Kanamatsu, Toshiya, Krawcyzk, Charlotte M., Liu, Li, Lofts, Jeremy C., Marsaglia, Kathleen M., Meyers, Philip A., Milkert, Doris, Milliken, Kitty L., Morgan, Julia K., Ramirez, Pedro, Seifert, Karl E., Shaw, Timothy J., Wilson, Chris, Yin, Chuan, Zhao, Xixi, Proceedings of the Ocean Drilling Program; scientific results, Iberia abyssal plain; covering Leg 149 of the cruises of the Drilling Vessel JOIDES Resolution; Balboa Harbor, Panama, to Lisbon, Portugal; sites 897-901, 10 March-25 May 1993
Texas A&M University, Ocean Drilling Program, College Station, TX, United States
149
603-615
The Iberia Abyssal Plain segment of the western Iberian Atlantic margin is characterized by highly extended and thinned continental crust bounded westward by a ridge of serpentinized peridotite within the transition zone between continental and oceanic crust. To better understand the evolution of this margin, we have analyzed the margin-normal profile Lusigal 12 (LG12) between Sites 898 and 901. After optimum processing, including prestack depth migration, the seismic sections image strong reflections below the breakup unconformity in this segment of the Iberian nonvolcanic margin. We show that these intracrustal reflections are overlain by probable basement rocks (Vp>5 km/s), whereas synrift or prerift sedimentary units exhibit generally lower velocities (Vp<4.7 km/s). Between Site 901 (identified by drilling as probable continental crust) and Site 900 (amphibolite facies metamorphosed gabbro) to the west, basement is broken up into landward-tilted crustal blocks bound by normal faults. These block-bounding faults appear to detach onto bright intracrustal reflections, which thus mark the lower boundary of the tilted blocks. By analogy with the similar seismic image of the Galicia Bank area to the north, where continental breakup has been controlled by a detachment fault structure (the S reflector), we suggest that continental breakup in the Iberia Abyssal Plain could have been also controlled by detachment faults that were active at different times during rifting. Extension of the upper lithosphere along the detachment system may have exposed a cross-section through the entire lithosphere from the upper crust (in the east, at Site 901), through the lower crust (Site 900), to the uppermost mantle exposed at the western edge of the drilling transect (Site 897, just landward of oceanic crust).
Coverage:Geographic coordinates:
North:40.4106
West:-12.0725East: -11.0335
South:40.4029

Structural geology; Applied geophysics; Atlantic Ocean; continental crust; continental margin; crust; crustal thinning; detachment faults; Europe; extension tectonics; faults; Galicia Bank; geophysical methods; geophysical profiles; geophysical surveys; Iberian abyssal plain; Iberian Peninsula; igneous rocks; Leg 149; metasomatism; North Atlantic; Northeast Atlantic; Ocean Drilling Program; oceanic crust; ODP Site 898; ODP Site 901; peridotites; plate tectonics; plutonic rocks; reflection methods; rifting; seismic migration; seismic profiles; serpentinization; Southern Europe; surveys; tectonics; ultramafics;

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