Passive Margins: Tectonics, Sedimentation and Magmatism
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This volume has evolved from papers written in memory of Professor David Roberts. They summarize the key findings of recent research on passive margins, from tectonics, bathymetry, stratigraphy and sedimentation, structural evolution and magmatism. Papers include analyses of the central and southern Atlantic margins of South America and Africa, papers on magmatism and extension in the NE Brazilian margin and on the Cote de Ivoire margin, rift architectures of the NW Red Sea margin, tectonics of the eastern Mediterranean margin, salt tectonics of passive margins of the Gulf of Mexico and Brazil, and papers on the NW Shelf margin of Australia. The volume provides readers with new insights into the complexities of passive margin systems that are in reality, not so passive.
Crustal structure of the central sector of the NE Brazilian equatorial margin
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Published:May 09, 2020
Abstract
The central equatorial Brazilian margin is divided into the Amazon and Barreirinhas divergent segments separated by the Pará-Maranhão transform segment. Analysis of regional 2D seismic lines allowed the definition of the crustal architecture of the margin. In the study area, the Barreirinhas segment has a proximal domain with a 30–35 km-thick continental crust, a 20–40 km-wide necked domain where the crust thins to 10 km, and an outboard domain with hyperextended continental crust. The Pará-Maranhão and Amazon segments consist of exhumation domains and their transition to ocean crust. Their structural styles indicate that this is a magma-poor passive margin with oceanic crust formed in a slow spreading centre. The Pará-Maranhão segment is bounded by two branches of the Saint Paul Fracture Zone that displace crustal domains with structures that document the transition from the distal part of a transform margin to an oceanic fracture zone. Two groups of post-rift volcanic complexes have been identified in the exhumation and oceanic domains, and whose distribution is controlled by the fracture zones. Late Cretaceous–Recent gravitationally-driven slide systems and mass-transport deposits indicate long-lived margin collapse and sediment redistribution fundamentally controlled by the underlying crustal structure of this part of the northeastern Brasilian passive margin.
- Amazon Basin
- Barreirinhas Basin
- Barremian
- Brazil
- Cenozoic
- collapse structures
- continental crust
- Cretaceous
- crust
- digital terrain models
- equatorial region
- exhumation
- faults
- fracture zones
- geophysical methods
- geophysical profiles
- geophysical surveys
- gravity sliding
- Holocene
- Lower Cretaceous
- magmatism
- Maranhao Brazil
- mass movements
- Mesozoic
- Miocene
- Neogene
- oceanic crust
- Paleocene
- Paleogene
- Para Brazil
- passive margins
- plate divergence
- plate tectonics
- Pliocene
- Quaternary
- rifting
- sea-floor spreading
- sedimentation
- segmentation
- seismic methods
- seismic profiles
- seismic stratigraphy
- South America
- spreading centers
- strike-slip faults
- surveys
- tectonics
- temporal distribution
- Tertiary
- transform faults
- two-dimensional models
- uplifts
- Upper Cretaceous
- Saint Paul fracture zone