4.7 Article

The tectono-magmatic and subsidence evolution during lithospheric breakup in a salt-rich rifted margin: Insights from a 3D seismic survey from southern Gabon

Journal

MARINE AND PETROLEUM GEOLOGY
Volume 128, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.marpetgeo.2021.105005

Keywords

Ocean-continent transition; Break-up; Subsidence; Salt; Exhumed mantle; Failed rift axis

Funding

  1. Total
  2. Total S.A.

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The study focuses on the Ocean Continent Transition (OCT) of the southern Gabon margin, analyzing the geometrical relationships of salt deposition and its relative timing to breakup. The results suggest that salt deposition occurred during mantle exhumation, with various depths and timing across the area. The observations also indicate that the space created in the faulted outer trough was filled partly by autochthonous salt and possibly also by downslope flow.
In this study, we present an interpretation of a 3D depth-migrated dataset imaging the Ocean ContinentTransition (OCT) of the southern Gabon margin. Located in an area where salt is not strongly overflowing the OCT, it allows the geometrical relationships of salt deposition and its relative timing to breakup to be determined. The OCT is formed by extensional propagators floored by exhumed mantle limited by either faultbounded upper-crustal or pre-salt sediments and/or magmatic additions. Based on our interpretations, we conclude that the pre-salt sequence was deposited over a wide area spanning crustal thinning to the onset of hyperextension and exhumation. The relative timing of salt deposition is constrained by the observations that detachment faults break away in the pre-salt sequence and that some of these faults also strongly offset the base salt and are linked to the creation of accommodation space in the salt. This is direct proof that salt was deposited during mantle exhumation. Salt deposition is interpreted to have occurred at variable depths. Evaporites formed approximately 1 km below sea level in the north, above a 4?6 km thick pre-salt sequence, and as deep as 2 km in the south. In this area, salt is interpreted to directly overlie exhumed mantle, but whether it was deposited on mantle or juxtaposed during exhumation remains more debatable. Space created in the faulted outer trough was filled partly by autochthonous salt and possibly also by downslope flow. Rifting continued after the cessation of salt deposition, followed by magmatic additions in the outer high and ultimately the onset of seafloor spreading and the formation of Penrose oceanic crust.

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