Tectonic evolution of the Walvis Ridge and West African margin, South Atlantic Ocean select="/dri:document/dri:meta/dri:pageMeta/dri:metadata[@element='title']/node()"/>

DSpace Repository

Show simple item record

dc.contributor.advisor van Andel Tjeerd en_US
dc.contributor.author Baumgartner Timothy Robert en_US
dc.date.accessioned 2013-07-02T14:06:53Z
dc.date.available 2013-07-02T14:06:53Z
dc.date.issued 1974 en_US
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/11070.1/2358
dc.description.abstract Abstract provided by author: en_US
dc.description.abstract The present structure of the Walvis Ridge is controlled by nearly orthogonal NE and NW trending faults shown by seismic reflection profiling. The NE trending set of faults approximate small circles of the pole of rotation at 21. 5°N, 14. 0°W and appear to offset the Walvis Ridge topography in a right-lateral sense. Reorientation of spreading would have produced extension across the Benguela Fracture Zone; development of short offset spreading centers along the Benguela Fracture Zone during this reorientation is proposed to explain the right-lateral offsets of the Walvis Ridge topography. Lack of geophysical information on the lower crustal structure prevents a direct explanation of the present elevation of the Walvis Ridge. However the Walvis Ridge is probably underlain by a low density root produced by alteration of the lower crust and upper mantle materials beneath the Benguela Fracture Zone which began during the spreading reorientation. Asymmetric spreading over the Walvis Ridge may have permitted the zone of crustal accretion to remain near the older Benguela Fracture Zone long enough to allow the creation of an anomalously broad low-density root which is responsible for the uplift of the Walvis Ridge en_US
dc.description.abstract The NNE trending Cameroon-Gabon and southern Angola coastlines which offset the generally SSE trend of the west African margin between 5°N and the Walvis Ridge are proposed as initial transform offsets of the South Atlantic proto-rift. Location of these initial offsets was controlled by lineations of the Precambrian/Early Paleozoic belts of thermotectonic activity which occur between older, stable cratonic nuclei of Gondwana. Shorter offsets of the continental margin south of the Walvis Ridge and the two major offsets of the west African coastline north of the Walvis Ridge define a pole of rotation at 5°N, 26°W for the initial South Atlantic opening en_US
dc.description.abstract A set of magnetic anomaly lineations near the continental margins of Angola and southwest Africa is described and named the Benguela sequence. These anomalies were formed during the initial phase of spreading and are displaced right-laterally almost 1000 kilometers across an extension of the continental offset along the southern Angola margin. This offset is named the Benguela Fracture Zone. The Benguela anomalies are correlated with anomalies of the Lynch sequence in the western North Atlantic. The change in direction between the two pre-Cenozoic phases of South Atlantic spreading is dated at roughly 120 m. y. B. P. based upon an extrapolation of the ages of anomalies in the Lynch sequence to the time of reorientation in the South Atlantic. Formation of the South Atlantic quiet zones occurred by sea-floor spreading about a pole of rotation at 21. 5°N,. 14. 0°W during the second phase of opening en_US
dc.format.extent 79 p en_US
dc.language.iso eng en_US
dc.subject Tectonics en_US
dc.subject Walvis ridge en_US
dc.title Tectonic evolution of the Walvis Ridge and West African margin, South Atlantic Ocean en_US
dc.type thesis en_US
dc.identifier.isis F099-199502130000083 en_US
dc.description.degree Corvallis en_US
dc.description.degree USA en_US
dc.description.degree Oregon State University en_US
dc.description.degree M Sc en_US
dc.masterFileNumber 83 en_US


Files in this item

Files Size Format View

There are no files associated with this item.

This item appears in the following Collection(s)

Show simple item record