[1] The Ligurian basin, western Mediterranean Sea, has opened from late Oligocene to early Miocene times, behind the Apulian subduction zone and partly within the western Alpine belt. We analyze the deep structures of the basin and its conjugate margins in order to describe the tectonic styles of opening and to investigate the possible contributions of forces responsible for the basin formation, especially the pulling force induced by the retreating subduction hinge and the gravitational body force from the Alpine wedge. To undertake this analysis, we combine new multichannel seismic reflection data (Malis cruise, 1995) with other geophysical data (previous multichannel and monochannel seismic sections, magnetic anomalies) and constrain them by geological sampling from two recent cruises (dredges from Marco cruise, 1995, and submersible dives from Cylice cruise, 1997). From an analysis of basement morphology and seismic facies, we refine the extent of the different domains in the Ligurian Sea: (1) the continental thinned margins, with strong changes in width and structure along strike and on both sides of the ocean; (2) the transitional domain to the basin; and (3) a narrow, atypical oceanic domain. Margin structures are characterized by few tilted blocks along the narrow margins, where inherited structures seem to control synrift sedimentation and margin segmentation. On the NW Corsican margin, extension is distributed over more than 120 km, including offshore Alpine Corsica, and several oceanward faults sole on a relatively flat reflector. We interpret them as previous Alpine thrusts reactivated during rifting as normal faults soling on a normal ductile shear zone. Using correlations between magnetic data, seismic facies, and sampling, we propose a new map of the distribution of magmatism. The oceanic domain depicts narrow, isolated magnetic anomalies and is interpreted as tholeitic volcanics settled within an unroofed upper mantle, whereas calcalkaline volcanism appears to be discontinuous but massive and has jumped in space and time, from the beginning of rifting on the Ligurian margin ($30 Ma), toward the Corsican margin at the end of the Corsica-Sardinia block rotation ($16 Ma). This space and time shift reveals the importance of the rollback of the Apulian slab and of the migration of the Alpine-Apennines belt front toward the E-SE for driving basin formation. We also state that initial rheological conditions and inherited crustal fabric induce important changes in the styles of deformation observed along margins and between conjugate margins. In the NE Ligurian basin the prerift Alpine crustal thickening together with slow rollback velocity likely contribute to distribute strain across the whole NW Corsican margin, whereas farther south the inherited Hercynian structural pattern combined with a faster rollback of the subducting plate tend to focus the extension at the foot of the margin, up to the Sardinian rift which ends within the SW Corsican margin. Therefore the mode of opening and the margin struct...
SUMMARY The deep structure of the West African continental margin between 5°S and 8°S was investigated using vertical reflection and wide‐angle reflection/refraction techniques, during the ZaïAngo project, a joint programme conducted in 2000 April by Ifremer and TotalFinaElf. To penetrate below the salt layer, a non‐conventional, low‐frequency seismic source was used in the ‘single‐bubble’ mode, together with ocean bottom instruments (hydrophones and seismometers) and a 4.5 km long streamer that recorded multichannel seismic reflection (MCS). The data show that the continental crust thins abruptly over a lateral distance of less than 50 km, from 30 km thick below the continental platform (based on gravity data), to less than 4 km thick below the Lower Congo Basin that formed prior to the Aptian salt deposition. This subsalt sedimentary basin (180 km wide, 4 km thick, with velocities varying from 4.7 km s−1 to 5.8 km s−1 at the bottom) is located between the foot of the continental slope and the oceanic domain. It is underlain by crust of an intermediary or transitional type, between continental crust and what can be recognized as oceanic crust. In the transitional zone, a crustal upper layer is present below the pre‐salt sedimentary basin, 3 to 7 km thick, with velocities increasing from 5.8 km s−1 at the top to 6.8 km s−1 at the bottom of the layer. This layer appears to thin regularly, from 6–7 km thick below the depocentre of the pre‐salt sedimentary basin to 3–4 km thick below the western termination of the basin. Below this upper crustal layer, an anomalous velocity layer (7.2 to 7.8 km s−1), is documented, below the eastern side of the basin, where the crustal thinning is at a maximum. The origin of this layer is unknown. Several arguments, like rifting duration (between 15 Ma and 30 Ma) or the absence of seaward‐dipping reflectors, precludes the hypothesis of underplated mantle material, but other hypotheses (such as serpentinized material or high‐grade metamorphic crustal rocks or a mixture of mafic and ultramafic crustal rocks) are plausible. Near the ocean termination of the basin, the transitional zone is bounded to the west by a basement ridge that is clearly documented on two profiles (‘7+11’ and 14) having a dense ocean bottom seismometer/hydrophone (OBS/OBH) spacing. On these profiles, an anomalous velocity layer is present in the westernmost part of the transitional zone (below the basement ridge) and in the oceanic domain. This layer, absent on profile 3, may be related either to oceanization and slow seafloor spreading processes or to a consequence of the rifting process.
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