Stretching–buoyancy interplay in the magma-poor rifting process

Author:

Sinha Sudipta Tapan1ORCID,Nemčok Michal23

Affiliation:

1. Reliance Industries Ltd., Reliance Corporate Park, Navi Mumbai 400701, India

2. College of Mining and Geology, Technical University of Ostrava, 17 listopadu 15, 708 00 Ostrava, Czech Republic

3. Institute of Geological Sciences at Polish Academy of Sciences, Twarda st. 51/55, 00-818 Warsaw, Poland

Abstract

Abstract The Cauvery Basin in East India represents a failed rift zone in the west and transform-related termination in the east. The deformation associated with a westward-propagating rift zone involves stretching and necking-related deformation from west to east. The rift axis and the flanks exhibit maximum and minimum deformation. In this study, we document the increasing role of buoyancy-driven processes and the development of the rift asymmetry during the advanced stages of rifting in a magma-poor setting. We use a series of reflection seismic profiles intersecting the failed rift zone maturing eastward. The onset of buoyancy-controlled extension correlates with the localized extension. It creates a relatively symmetrical axial dome, and exhibits rift flank rotations and central up-warping. This permanent uplift is associated with lower crustal ductile flow. Notably, the deep-seated syn-rift buoyancy forces progressively operate eastward. We deduce the associated transient dome uplift and its subsequent dissipation using a seismic flattening technique. The axial dome formation is associated with an upwelling asthenosphere and lower lithospheric mantle. This correlates with localized contraction within flat-lying fault blocks at its flanks, concurrently forming the typical hanging-wall and footwall geometry. The multiple shallow- to deep-seated mechanisms promote strain acceleration in the uplifted regions along the rift zone.

Publisher

Geological Society of London

Subject

Geology,Ocean Engineering,Water Science and Technology

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