Numerical experiments have been used to relate the range in the distribution and the style of deformation observed in rifted margins to localizing/delocalizing thermomechanical processes. The experiments give rise to four end‐members of margins for varying initial lithospheric strength and extension rates. The first two end‐members are narrow and asymmetric and narrow and near‐symmetric, conjugate margins. The third end‐member is asymmetric conjugate margins, wherein one side is <100 km wide and the other is >100–300 km wide. Lastly, we explore wide rift systems that may form very asymmetric conjugate margins with one narrow margin and a very wide conjugate, 200 km to > 350 km across. With initial and boundary conditions close to that inferred from the North and South Atlantic margins, we find that not all margins experience a polyphase rifting history of stretching‐thinning‐exhumation. Instead, the stretching mode can be very short or protracted, and the thinning or the exhumation modes can be incomplete or absent. The deformation localization of the thinning mode is in places associated with the formation of a keystone block or “block H.” A new mechanism for the formation of the unstable crustal root under block H is described, wherein the bounding border faults lead to differential thinning of the crust and mantle lithosphere. Nonuniform extension also occurs in both types of wide rift systems and is related to the sequential deformation migration outward of an initial graben, associated with effective lithospheric strengthening that occurs during crustal thinning and bending.
A long‐standing question surrounding rifted margins concerns how the observed fault‐restored extension in the upper crust is usually less than that calculated from subsidence models or from crustal thickness estimates, the so‐called “extension discrepancy.” Here we revisit this issue drawing on recently completed numerical results. We extract thinning profiles from four end‐member geodynamic model rifts with varying width and asymmetry and propose tectonic models that best explain those results. We then relate the spatial and temporal evolution of upper to lower crustal thinning, or crustal depth‐dependent thinning (DDT), and crustal thinning to mantle thinning, or lithospheric DDT, which are difficult to achieve in natural systems due to the lack of observations that constrain thinning at different stages between prerift extension and lithospheric breakup. Our results support the hypothesis that crustal DDT cannot be the main cause of the extension discrepancy, which may be overestimated because of the difficulty in recognizing distributed deformation, and polyphase and detachment faulting in seismic data. More importantly, the results support that lithospheric DDT is likely to dominate at specific stages of rift evolution because crustal and mantle thinning distributions are not always spatially coincident and at times are not even balanced by an equal magnitude of thinning in two dimensions. Moreover, either pure or simple shear models can apply at various points of time and space depending on the type of rift. Both DDT and pure/simple shear variations across space and time can result in observed complex fault geometries, uplift/subsidence, and thermal histories.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
customersupport@researchsolutions.com
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.