Affiliation:
1. Laboratoire de Géologie ‐ CNRS UMR 8538 École normale supérieure ‐ PSL University Paris France
2. Sorbonne Université CNRS‐INSU Institut des Sciences de la Terre de Paris Paris France
3. Université Paris Cité Institut de physique du globe de Paris CNRS Paris France
Abstract
AbstractThe Owen transform fault (OTF) connecting the Sheba and the Carlsberg spreading ridges in the Indian Ocean currently forms the active plate boundary between India and Somalia plates. This 330‐km‐long transform fault is by far the longest transform fault along the India‐Somalia plate boundary and its valley is buried under the thick distal turbidites of the Indus Fan with total thickness ranging from 1,000 to >5,000 m. A new set of seismic reflection and multibeam bathymetric data reveals remarkable transpressive structures along its entire length recorded as folds in the sedimentary cover, eruption of mud ridges at the seafloor, thrusts in the young oceanic lithosphere. Based on a new regional time‐calibration of the seismic reflectors, we show that sediments in the transform valley (post 8.6 Ma) recorded a period of tectonic quiescence until the onset of a transpressive event around 1.5–2.4 Ma that we relate to a minor change in India‐Somalia kinematics not captured by magnetic anomalies. This tectonic regime is still active based on compressive earthquakes and deformation of the most recent sediments. Transpression resulted in the formation of a proto‐median ridge and the coeval propagation of the tip of the Carlsberg Ridge into the Somalian plate. These features are typically encountered at many other transform faults but rarely captured in their very early stage.
Funder
Institut national des sciences de l'Univers
Flotte Océanographique Française
Publisher
American Geophysical Union (AGU)
Subject
Geochemistry and Petrology,Geophysics
Cited by
4 articles.
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