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  • 1
    ISSN: 1432-1157
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Geosciences
    Notes: Abstract The structure of the South Powell Ridge (SPR), separating the Late Cenozoic ocean-floored Powell Basin and the Mesozoic Weddell Sea domain, is revealed by multichannel seismic data. The SPR appears as a basement high, bounded northward by transtensional faults and by normal and major reverse faults to the south. These margin features seem to be linked to the Powell Basin southern strike-slip margin and to the Jane Arc paleotrench, respectively. We suggest the ridge evolved from the Antarctic Peninsula passive margin to become the deformational front of the Scotia/Antarctica Plate boundary, later being welded to the Antarctic Plate.
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1432-1157
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Geosciences
    Notes: Abstract  Magnetic and gravimetric data from the central Alboran Sea allow identification of two axes of crustal thinning, which were probably active during the Oligocene–Early Miocene. The western Alboran basin axis is subparallel and may be related in origin to the Gibraltar Arc. The ENE–WSW trending Alboran Channel axis is probably intruded by basic igneous rocks and may represent the western end of the Algerian–Balearic basin rift. Present-day small areas with high heat flow may well be related to volcanism and an anomalous mantle. Areas of active deformation in the Alboran Sea accommodate the present Eurasia-Africa convergence.
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  • 3
    ISSN: 0016-7835
    Keywords: Key words Extension ; Detachments ; Betic cordilleras ; Neogene evolution ; Shear zones
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Geosciences
    Notes: Abstract  In the internal zones of the Betic cordilleras, extensional structures have developed from the Upper Oligocene to the present day; they are contemporaneous with compressional structures (folds and thrusts) in the external zones. From the Upper Oligocene to the Aquitanian, extension occurred in the Maláguide/Alpujárride detachment, and related structures show varying kinematics in different sectors. Younger deformations with a top-to-the-N sense of movement have affected Nevado-Filábride (ductile shear zones), Alpujárride (ductile and brittle shear zones) and Maláguide rocks (normal faults). At least from the Late Burdigalian up to the Lower Tortonian, displacements have occurred in the Alpujárride/Nevado-Filábride detachment. Deformations have been generally non-coaxial, with a top-to-the-W sense of movement. Stretching lineation trends in the Nevado-Filábride rocks curve from E to W suggesting a progressive variation of the ductile-shear-zone kinematics related to the Alpujárride/Nevado-Filábride detachment between the Aquitanian and Lower Tortonian stages. Deformations from the Lower Tortonian to the present day are normal faults, formed in extensional settings in the upper part of the crust, and folds and strike-slip faults which indicate N–S to NNW–SSE shortening directions and E–W to ENE–WSW extension directions.
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  • 4
    ISSN: 1437-3262
    Keywords: Extension ; Detachments ; Betic cordilleras ; Neogene evolution ; Shear zones
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Geosciences
    Notes: Abstract In the internal zones of the Betic cordilleras, extensional structures have developed from the Upper Oligocene to the present day; they are contemporaneous with compressional structures (folds and thrusts) in the external zones. From the Upper Oligocene to the Aquitanian, extension occurred in the Maláguide/Alpujárride detachment, and related structures show varying kinematics in different sectors. Younger deformations with a top-to-the-N sense of movement have affected Nevado-Filábride (ductile shear zones), Alpujárride (ductile and brittle shear zones) and Maláguide rocks (normal faults). At least from the Late Burdigalian up to the Lower Tortonian, displacements have occurred in the Alpujárride/Nevado-Filábride detachment. Deformations have been generally non-coaxial, with a top-to-the-W sense of movement. Stretching lineation trends in the Nevado-Filábride rocks curve from E to W suggesting a progressive variation of the ductile-shear-zone kinematics related to the Alpujárride/Nevado-Filábride detachment between the Aquitanian and Lower Tortonian stages. Deformations from the Lower Tortonian to the present day are normal faults, formed in extensional settings in the upper part of the crust, and folds and strike-slip faults which indicate N-S to NNW-SSE shortening directions and E-W to ENE-WSW extension directions.
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  • 5
    ISSN: 1432-1157
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Geosciences
    Notes: Abstract The Alboran Domain has undergone a westsouthwestern-east-northeastern post-Aquitanian minimal extension of 104% in two stages. In the first one (Burdigalian-early Tortonian), the Mecina Extensional System was active, the Neogene Basins were piggy-back ones, and stress ellipsoids were oblate. In the second stage (Tortonian-Present), stress ellipsoids were prolate, and the original shape of the outcropping Neogene Basins was nearly the same as their present morphology. An orogenic wedge model is proposed in which the westward strain of the wedge has been produced by variations in the spreading rates of the Ligurian-Balearic and Tyrrhenian basin oceanic crusts.
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  • 6
    ISSN: 1573-0581
    Keywords: Drake Passage ; oceanic crust stratigraphy ; ridge-transform intersection ; tectonics
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Geosciences , Physics
    Notes: Abstract New swath bathymetric, multichannel seismic and magnetic data reveal the complexity of the intersection between the extinct West Scotia Ridge (WSR) and the Shackleton Fracture Zone (SFZ), a first-order NW-SE trending high-relief ridge cutting across the Drake Passage. The SFZ is composed of shallow, ridge segments and depressions, largely parallel to the fracture zone with an `en echelon' pattern in plan view. These features are bounded by tectonic lineaments, interpreted as faults. The axial valley of the spreading center intersects the fracture zone in a complex area of deformation, where N120° E lineaments and E–W faults anastomose on both sides of the intersection. The fracture zone developed within an extensional regime, which facilitated the formation of oceanic transverse ridges parallel to the fracture zone and depressions attributed to pull-apart basins, bounded by normal and strike-slip faults. On the multichannel seismic (MCS) profiles, the igneous crust is well stratified, with numerous discontinuous high-amplitude reflectors and many irregular diffractions at the top, and a thicker layer below. The latter has sparse and weak reflectors, although it locally contains strong, dipping reflections. A bright, slightly undulating reflector observed below the spreading center axial valley at about 0.75 s (twt) depth in the igneous crust is interpreted as an indication of the relict axial magma chamber. Deep, high-amplitude subhorizontal and slightly dipping reflections are observed between 1.8 and 3.2 s (twt) below sea floor, but are preferentially located at about 2.8–3.0 s (twt) depth. Where these reflections are more continuous they may represent the Mohorovicic seismic discontinuity. More locally, short (2–3 km long), very high-amplitude reflections observed at 3.6 and 4.3 s (twt) depth below sea floor are attributed to an interlayered upper mantle transition zone. The MCS profiles also show a pattern of regularly spaced, steep-inclined reflectors, which cut across layers 2 and 3 of the oceanic crust. These reflectors are attributed to deformation under a transpressional regime that developed along the SFZ, shortly after spreading ceased at the WSR. Magnetic anomalies 5 to 5 E may be confidently identified on the flanks of the WSR. Our spreading model assumes slow rates (ca. 10–20 mm/yr), with slight asymmetries favoring the southeastern flank between 5C and 5, and the northwestern flank between 5 and extinction. The spreading rate asymmetry means that accretion was slower during formation of the steeper, shallower, southeastern flank than of the northwestern flank.
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2007-10-08
    Description: In the eastern Betic Cordillera, non-cylindrical doubly plunging folds deform the Subbetic Zone (the hanging wall of the Internal-External Zone boundary). Their hinges define an arc from north-south trends in the east to ENE-WSW in the west. These folds began to form during the Early Burdigalian with a NNE-SSW trend. Middle Burdigalian rocks define progressive unconformities in the cores of the synforms, recording the tightening of the folds and an increase in the plunge of the fold hinges. All these folds experienced verticalaxis rotations during the Early Miocene, acquiring the present-day arcuate pattern. During the Middle Burdigalian, the thrusting of the External Zones over the Internal Zones occurred with a top-to-the-SE sense of movement. Upper Burdigalian deposits seal the tectonic windows eroded in these thrust surfaces. This deformational history records a constrictional deformation with area reduction in the Subbetic Zone during the Early Miocene, which can be correlated with the dextral oblique convergence between the Internal and the External Zones.
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2007-12-19
    Description: The ScotiaAntarctic plate boundary extends along the southern branch of the Scotia Arc, between triple junctions with the former Phoenix plate to the west (57{degrees}W) and with the Sandwich plate to the east (30{degrees}W). The main mechanism responsible for the present arc configuration is the development of the Scotia and Sandwich plates from 3035 Ma, related to breakup of the continental connection between South America and the Antarctic Peninsula. The ScotiaAntarctic plate boundary is a very complex tectonic zone, because both oceanic and continental elements are involved. Present-day sinistral transcurrent motion probably began 8 Ma ago. The main active structures that we observed in the area include releasing and restraining bends, with related deep extensional and compressional basins, and probable pull-apart basins. The western sector of the plate boundary crosses fragmented continental crust: the Western South Scotia Ridge, with widespread development of pull-apart basins and releasing bends deeper than 5000 m, filled by asymmetrical sedimentary wedges. The northern border of the South Orkney microcontinent, in the central sector, has oceanic and continental crust in contact along a large thrust zone. Finally, the eastern sector of the South Scotia Ridge is located within Discovery Bank, a piece of continental crust from a former arc. On its southern border, strike-slip and normal faults produce a 5500-m-deep trough that may be interpreted as a pull-apart basin. In the eastern and western South Scotia Ridge, despite extreme continental-crustal thinning, the basins show no development of oceanic crust. This geometry is conditioned by the distinctive rheological behaviour of the crust involved, with the bulk concentration of deformation within the rheologically weaker continental blocks.
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  • 9
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    In:  Tectonophysics, Amsterdam, Schweizerbart'sche Verlagsbuchhandlung, vol. 357, no. 1-4, pp. 159-186, pp. L07302, (ISSN 0016-8548, ISBN 3-510-50045-8)
    Publication Date: 2002
    Keywords: paleo ; Stress ; Geol. aspects ; Spain ; Portugal
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  • 10
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    In:  Pageoph, London, Army Corps of Engineers, Woodward-Clyde Consultants, vol. 159, no. 11-12, pp. 2733-2749, pp. 1062, (ISBN: 0-12-018847-3)
    Publication Date: 2002
    Keywords: Strong motions ; Site amplification ; Nakamura ; Earthquake risk ; PAG
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