Manatschal, Gianreto et al. (2001): The role of detachment faulting in the formation of an ocean-continent transition; insights from the Iberia abyssal plain

Leg/Site/Hole:
ODP 103
ODP 149
ODP 173
ODP 173 1067
ODP 173 1070
ODP 149 897
Identifier:
2003-063783
georefid

Creator:
Manatschal, Gianreto
ETH Zuerich, Geologisches Institut, Zurich, Federal Republic of Germany
author

Froitzheim, N.
Southampton Oceanography Center, United Kingdom
author

Rubenach, M.
University of Hawaii, United States
author

Turrin, B. D.
University of Bonn, Federal Republic of Germany
author

Identification:
The role of detachment faulting in the formation of an ocean-continent transition; insights from the Iberia abyssal plain
2001
In: Wilson, R. C. L. (editor), Whitmarsh, R. B. (editor), Taylor, B. (editor), Froitzheim, N. (editor), Non-volcanic rifting of continental margins; a comparison of evidence from land and sea
Geological Society of London, London, United Kingdom
187
405-428
The Iberia Abyssal Plain segment of the West Iberia margin was drilled during Ocean Drilling Program Legs 149 and 173 and has been extensively studied geophysically. We present new microstructural investigations and new age data. These, together with observed distribution of upper- and lower-crustal and mantle rocks along the ocean-continent transition suggest the existence of three detachment faults, one of which was previously unrecognized. This information, together with a simple kinematic inversion of the reinterpreted seismic section Lusigal 12, allows discussion of the kinematic evolution of detachment faulting in terms of the temporal sequence of faulting, offset along individual faults, and thinning of the crust during faulting. Our study shows that the detachment structures recognized in the seismic profile became active only during a final stage of rifting when the crust was already considerably thinned to c. 12 km. The total amount of extension accommodated by the detachment faults is of the order of 32.6 km corresponding to a beta factor of about two. During rifting, the mode of deformation changed oceanwards. Initial listric faulting led to asymmetric basins, accommodating low amounts of extension, and was followed by a situation in which the footwall was pulled out from underneath a relatively stable hanging wall accommodating high amounts of extension. Deformation along the latter faults resulted in a conveyor-belt type sediment accumulation in which the exhumed footwall rocks were exposed, eroded and redeposited along the same active fault system.
English
Serial
Coverage:Geographic coordinates:
North:40.5019
West:-12.4326East: -12.2847
South:40.4747

Solid-earth geophysics; Atlantic Ocean; continental crust; continental margin; crust; detachment faults; East Atlantic; Europe; faults; geophysical methods; geophysical surveys; Iberian abyssal plain; Iberian Peninsula; Leg 103; Leg 149; Leg 173; North Atlantic; Northeast Atlantic; Ocean Drilling Program; oceanic crust; ODP Site 1067; ODP Site 1070; ODP Site 897; passive margins; plate tectonics; Portugal; seismic methods; Southern Europe; Spain; surveys; tectonics;

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