Mantle exhumation at slow-spreading ridges is favoured by extensional tectonics through low-angle detachment faults(1-4), and, along transforms, by transtension due to changes in ridge/transform geometry(5,6). Less common, exhumation by compressive stresses has been proposed for the large-offset transforms of the equatorial Atlantic(7,8). Here we show, using high-resolution bathymetry, seismic and gravity data, that the northern transform fault of the St Paul system has been controlled by compressive deformation since similar to 10 million years ago. The long-lived transpression resulted from ridge overlap due to the propagation of the northern Mid-Atlantic Ridge segment into the transform domain, which induced the migration and segmentation of the transform fault creating restraining stepovers. An anticlockwise change in plate motion at similar to 11 million years ago(5) initially favoured extension in the left-stepping transform, triggering the formation of a transverse ridge, later uplifted through transpression, forming the St Peter and St Paul islets. Enhanced melt supply at the ridge axis due to the nearby Sierra Leone thermo chemical anomaly(9) is responsible for the robust response of the northern Mid-Atlantic Ridge segment to the kinematic change. The long-lived process at the origin of the compressive stresses is directly linked to the nature of the underlying mantle and not to a change in the far-field stress regime.

Extreme mantle uplift and exhumation along a transpressive transform fault

Brunelli Daniele;Ligi Marco;
2016

Abstract

Mantle exhumation at slow-spreading ridges is favoured by extensional tectonics through low-angle detachment faults(1-4), and, along transforms, by transtension due to changes in ridge/transform geometry(5,6). Less common, exhumation by compressive stresses has been proposed for the large-offset transforms of the equatorial Atlantic(7,8). Here we show, using high-resolution bathymetry, seismic and gravity data, that the northern transform fault of the St Paul system has been controlled by compressive deformation since similar to 10 million years ago. The long-lived transpression resulted from ridge overlap due to the propagation of the northern Mid-Atlantic Ridge segment into the transform domain, which induced the migration and segmentation of the transform fault creating restraining stepovers. An anticlockwise change in plate motion at similar to 11 million years ago(5) initially favoured extension in the left-stepping transform, triggering the formation of a transverse ridge, later uplifted through transpression, forming the St Peter and St Paul islets. Enhanced melt supply at the ridge axis due to the nearby Sierra Leone thermo chemical anomaly(9) is responsible for the robust response of the northern Mid-Atlantic Ridge segment to the kinematic change. The long-lived process at the origin of the compressive stresses is directly linked to the nature of the underlying mantle and not to a change in the far-field stress regime.
2016
Istituto di Scienze Marine - ISMAR
MID-ATLANTIC RIDGE; ST-PAUL ROCKS; EQUATORIAL ATLANTIC; FRACTURE-ZONE; OCEAN-RIDGE; HEAT-FLOW; BENEATH; LITHOSPHERE; BATHYMETRY; MECHANISMS
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14243/324912
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