Problematic plate reconstruction
Problematic plate reconstruction
Date
2012-10
Authors
Tucholke, Brian E.
Sibuet, Jean-Claude
Sibuet, Jean-Claude
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Abstract
As has been previously proposed, Bronner et al. suggest that opening
of the rift between Newfoundland and Iberia involved exhumation of mantle rocks until
112 million years ago, subsequent seafloor spreading, and crustal thickening along the
high-amplitude J magnetic anomaly by magma that propagated from the Southeast
Newfoundland Ridge area. Conventionally, the anomalous magnetism and basement
ridges associated with the J anomaly north of the Newfoundland-Gibraltar Fracture Zone
are thought to have formed about 125 million years ago at chron M0 (Fig. 1a), although
the crust probably experienced some later magmatic overprinting. The M0 age would
make their formation simultaneous with that of the similar J anomaly and basement
ridges (the J Anomaly Ridge and Madeira Tore Rise) along the Mid-Atlantic Ridge to the
south and place them within a zone of exhumed mantle in the Newfoundland-Iberia
rift. In contrast, Bronner et al. propose that the J anomaly and associated basement
ridges were formed by later magmatism (about 112 million years ago) that marked the
end of mantle exhumation in the rift. We argue here that constraints from plate tectonic
reconstructions render this possibility untenable.
Description
Author Posting. © The Author(s), 2012. This is the author's version of the work. It is posted here by permission of Nature Publishing Group for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Nature Geoscience 5 (2012): 676-677, doi:10.1038/ngeo1596.