Extensional fault geometry and evolution within rifted margin hyper-extended continental crust leading to mantle exhumation and allochthon formation

IF 3.2 2区 地球科学 Q1 GEOCHEMISTRY & GEOPHYSICS Solid Earth Pub Date : 2024-04-05 DOI:10.5194/se-15-477-2024
Júlia Gómez-Romeu, Nick Kusznir
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Abstract

Abstract. Seismic reflection interpretation at magma-poor rifted margins shows that crustal thinning within the hyper-extended domain occurs by in-sequence oceanward extensional faulting which terminates in a sub-horizontal reflector in the topmost mantle immediately beneath tilted crustal fault blocks. This sub-horizontal reflector is interpreted to be a detachment surface that develops sequentially with oceanward in-sequence crustal faulting. We investigate the geometry and evolution of active and inactive extensional faulting due to flexural isostatic rotation during magma-poor margin hyper-extension using a recursive adaptation of the rolling-hinge model of Buck (1988) and compare modelling results with published seismic interpretation. In the case of progressive in-sequence faulting, we show that sub-horizontal reflectors imaged on published seismic reflection profiles can be generated by the flexural isostatic rotation of faults with initially high-angle geometry. Our modelling supports the hypothesis of Lymer et al. (2019) that the S reflector on the Galician margin is a sub-horizontal detachment generated by the in-sequence incremental addition of the isostatically rotated soles of block-bounding extensional faults. Flexural isostatic rotation produces shallowing of emergent fault angles, fault locking, and the development of new high-angle shortcut fault segments within the hanging wall. This results in the transfer and isostatic rotation of triangular pieces of hanging wall onto exhumed fault footwall, forming extensional allochthons which our modelling predicts are typically limited to a few kilometres in lateral extent and thickness. The initial geometry of basement extensional faults is a long-standing question. Our modelling results show that a sequence of extensional listric or planar faults with otherwise identical tectonic parameters produce very similar seabed bathymetric relief but distinct Moho and allochthon shapes. Our preferred interpretation of our modelling results and seismic observations is that faults are initially planar in geometry but are isostatically rotated and coalesce at depth to form the seismically observed sub-horizontal detachment in the topmost mantle. In-sequence extensional faulting of hyper-extended continental crust results in a smooth bathymetric transition from thinned continental crust to exhumed mantle. In contrast, out-of-sequence faulting results in a transition to exhumed mantle with bathymetric relief.
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断裂边缘超伸展大陆地壳内导致地幔掘起和异地壳形成的伸展断层几何学和演化
摘要。岩浆贫乏的断裂边缘的地震反射解释表明,超延伸域内的地壳减薄是通过向洋的顺序延伸断层发生的,其终点是紧靠倾斜地壳断层块体下方的最上层地幔中的次水平反射面。这个次水平反射镜被解释为一个脱离面,它是随着大洋向序地壳断层的发生而依次形成的。我们利用对 Buck(1988 年)的滚动铰链模型的递归改编,研究了贫岩浆边缘超伸展过程中由于挠性等静定旋转引起的活动和非活动伸展断层的几何形状和演化,并将建模结果与已发表的地震解释结果进行了比较。在渐进式顺层断层的情况下,我们表明,已公布的地震反射剖面上的次水平反射体可能是由最初具有高角度几何形状的断层的挠曲等静定旋转产生的。我们的建模支持 Lymer 等人(2019 年)的假设,即加利西亚边缘的 S 型反射体是由块带状伸展断层的等静力旋转底面的内序增量所产生的次水平剥离。挠性等静力旋转导致出现的断层角度变浅、断层锁定,并在悬壁内形成新的高角度捷径断层段。这导致悬壁的三角形片段转移并等静力旋转到出露的断层底壁上,形成延伸断层,根据我们的建模预测,这些断层的横向范围和厚度通常仅限于几公里。基底延伸断层的初始几何形状是一个长期存在的问题。我们的建模结果表明,在构造参数完全相同的情况下,一连串的延伸性环状或平面断层会产生非常相似的海底水深起伏,但却具有不同的莫霍面和等深线形状。我们对建模结果和地震观测结果的首选解释是,断层在几何形状上最初是平面的,但在深度上发生了等静力旋转和凝聚,从而在最上层地幔形成了地震观测到的次水平剥离。超延伸大陆地壳的顺层延伸断层导致从变薄的大陆地壳到脱壳地幔的平稳水深过渡。与此相反,序外断裂则导致地幔向出露地幔的过渡,并伴有水深起伏。
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来源期刊
Solid Earth
Solid Earth GEOCHEMISTRY & GEOPHYSICS-
CiteScore
6.90
自引率
8.80%
发文量
78
审稿时长
4.5 months
期刊介绍: Solid Earth (SE) is a not-for-profit journal that publishes multidisciplinary research on the composition, structure, dynamics of the Earth from the surface to the deep interior at all spatial and temporal scales. The journal invites contributions encompassing observational, experimental, and theoretical investigations in the form of short communications, research articles, method articles, review articles, and discussion and commentaries on all aspects of the solid Earth (for details see manuscript types). Being interdisciplinary in scope, SE covers the following disciplines: geochemistry, mineralogy, petrology, volcanology; geodesy and gravity; geodynamics: numerical and analogue modeling of geoprocesses; geoelectrics and electromagnetics; geomagnetism; geomorphology, morphotectonics, and paleoseismology; rock physics; seismics and seismology; critical zone science (Earth''s permeable near-surface layer); stratigraphy, sedimentology, and palaeontology; rock deformation, structural geology, and tectonics.
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