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- Imaging exhumed lower continental crust in the distal Jequitinhonha basin, BrazilPublication . Loureiro, Afonso; Schnürle, P.; Klingelhoefer, Frauke; Afilhado, Alexandra; Pinheiro, J.; Evain, Mikael; Gallais, F.; Dias, Nuno; Rabineau, Marina; Baltzer, A.; Benabdellouahed, M.; Soares, J.; Fuck, R.; Cupertino, J. A.; Viana, Adriano Roessler; Matias, Luis; Moulin, Maryline; Aslanian, D.; Morvan, L.; Mazé, J. P.; Pierre, D.; Roudaut-Pitel, M.; Rio, I.; Alves, D.; Júnior, P. Barros; Biari, Youssef; Corela, C.; Crozon, J.; Duarte, J. L.; Ducatel, C.; Falcão, C.; Fernagu, P.; Lima, M. Vinicius Aparecido Gomes de; Piver, D. Le; Mokeddem, Z.; Pelleau, P.; Rigoti, C.; Roest, W.; Roudaut, M.Twelve combined wide-angle refraction and coincident multi-channel seismic profiles were acquired in the Jequitinhonha-Camamu-Almada, Jacuípe, and Sergipe-Alagoas basins, NE Brazil, during the SALSA experiment in 2014. Profiles SL11 and SL12 image the Jequitinhonha basin, perpendicularly to the coast, with 15 and 11 four-channel ocean-bottom seismometers, respectively. Profile SL10 runs parallel to the coast, crossing profiles SL11 and SL12, imaging the proximal Jequitinhonha and Almada basins with 17 ocean-bottom seismometers. Forward modelling, combined with pre-stack depth migration to increase the horizontal resolution of the velocity models, indicates that sediment thickness varies between 3.3 km and 6.2 km in the distal basin. Crustal thickness at the western edge of the profiles is of around 20 km, with velocity gradients indicating a continental origin. It decreases to less than 5 km in the distal basin, with high seismic velocities and gradients, not compatible with normal oceanic crust nor exhumed upper mantle. Typical oceanic crust is never imaged along these about 200 km-long profiles and we propose that the transitional crust in the Jequitinhonha basin is a made of exhumed lower continental crust.
- Deep structure of the North Natal Valley (Mozambique) using combined wide-angle and reflection seismic dataPublication . Lepretre, A.; Schnurle, P.; Evain, Mikael; Verrier, F.; Moorcroft, D.; Clarens, P. de; Corela, C.; Afilhado, Alexandra; Loureiro, Afonso; LEROY, Sylvie; D'Acremont, Elia; Thompson, J.; Aslanian, D.; Moulin, MarylineThe North Natal Valley (NNV) and the Mozambique Coastal Plain (MCP) are key areas for the understanding of the SW Indian Ocean history since the Gondwana break-up. Nevertheless, the deep structures and the nature of the NNV and MCP remain discussed in the absence of deep geophysical data. In 2016, the NNV, MCP and Limpopo margin (LM) have been investigated along seven wide-angle and MCS profiles. The combined wide-angle and reflection seismic interpretation along the N-S MZ7 profile reveals an upper sedimentary sequence characterized by low velocities generally not exceeding 3 km/s, with thicknesses varying from 0.150 km in the central part to similar to 2.8 km in the south. The underlying sequence is formed of a 2.53.0 km thick volcano-sedimentary sequence which presents important lateral and with depth changes and presence of high velocity lenses, indicating inter-bedded volcanic sills and recurrent magmatic episodes. The south of the NNV including the Naude Ridge (NR) presents a disturbed sedimentary cover with structural highs and southward-dipping reflectors and sub-basins. The crust, reaching 35-40 km onshore below the MCP, gently thins below the continental shelf to a regular thickness of similar to 29 km below the NNV. Crustal velocities reveal low velocity gradients, with atypical high velocities. South the ND, the crust thins to 15 km. We interpret the velocity architecture combined with the evidences of volcanism at shallower depths as indicating an intensively intruded continental crust. Contrary to what is proposed in most geodynamic models, the Mozambique Coastal plain and the Natal Valley are both of continental nature, with an abrupt necking zone located south of NR. The Antarctica plate was therefore situated at the eastern limit of these two domains before the Gondwana breakup.
- Deep structure of the Pará-Maranhão/Barreirinhas passive margin in the equatorial Atlantic (NE Brazil)Publication . Aslanian, Daniel; Gallais, Flora; Afilhado, Alexandra; Schnurle, Philippe; Moulin, Maryline; Evain, Mikael; Dias, Nuno; Soares, José; Fuck, Reinhart; Neto, Otaviano da Cruz Pessoa; Viana, AdrianoThe Pará-Maranhão/Barreirinhas margin, North Brazil, is a pull-apart passive margin, with two strike-slip borders, formed during the opening of the Equatorial Atlantic Ocean during Cretaceous time. Its geometry and evolution are speculative due to the lack of information on the crustal structure and the crustal nature. We present here the E-W profiles of the MAGIC (Margins of brAzil, Ghana and Ivory Coast) deep seismic experiment, a joint project between French and Brazilian universities, research institutes and the industry. Fifty-six Ocean Bottom Seismometers (OBS) and a 4.5 seismic streamer were deployed at sea along 2 of the 5 MAGIC profiles. One profile was extended onshore by installing 8 land stations. We perform forward modelling through combined interpretation of the multichannel seismic and of the main reflected and refracted of these phases recorded by the OBSs. The final P-wave velocity models reveal distinct structural domains from onshore Brazil towards the Atlantic Ocean characterized by variations of the crustal thicknesses and velocities: (1) an unthinned continental crust below the São Luís Craton, where the crust is 33 km thick, (2) a 60 km wide necking domain below the Ilha de Santana Platform; (3) offshore, east of the continental slope, a 10 km-thick deep sedimentary basin underlain by a 5 km thick crust with velocity of 6.2–6.9 km/s that we interpret as an exhumed lower continental crust, on the top of an Anomalous Velocity Layer (AVL) probably made of intrusions of mantle-derived melts into the lower continental crust, or a mixture of them; (4) eastwards, the limit of the previous domain is marked by NW-SE aligned volcanoes and the disappearance of the AVL. The sedimentary succession becomes thinner (6 km) overlaying a proto-oceanic crust characterized by seismic velocities higher than “normal” oceanic crust in its upper part, but in continuity with the velocity described in the previous domain; (5) followed by a more characteristic but thin oceanic crust. The middle/lower continental crust seems not only to have a crucial role in the genesis of the passive margin but also to be involved in the genesis of the first oceanic crust. The passage to a typical oceanic crust seems to have occurred progressively by steps: first in the deeper layer by the setup of more and more intrusions of mantle-derived melts at the base of the crust or mixture of exhumed lower crust and mantle, producing a domain of proto-oceanic crust, then by the emplacement of an upper 1-2 km-thick layer with typical oceanic characteristics.
- Gondwana breakup: messages from the North Natal ValleyPublication . Moulin, Maryline; Aslanian, Daniel; Evain, Mikael; Lepretre, Angelique; Schnurle, Philippe; Verrier, Fanny; Thompson, Joseph; De Clarens, Philippe; LEROY, Sylvie; Dias, Nuno; Afilhado, Alexandra; Apprioul, R.; Bronner, A.; Castilla, R.; Corela, Carlos; Crozon, J.; Davy, C.; D'acremont, E.; Droz, Laurence; Duarte, J. L.; Fernagu, P.; Ferrant, A.; Fischer, M.; Franke, D.; Inguane, H.; Jorry, Stephan; Jouet, G.; Loureiro, Afonso; Le Bouteiller, P.; Le Bihan, C.; Mahanjane, S.; Moocroft, D.; Pelleau, P.; Picot, M.; Pierre, D.; Pitel, M.; Rabineau, M.; Rombe, C.; Roudaut, M.; Senkans, A.; Toucanne, SamuelThe Natal Valley, offshore Mozambique, is a key area for understanding the evolution of East Gondwana. Within the scope of the integrated multidisciplinary PAMELA project, we present new wide-angle seismic data and interpretations, which considerably alter Geoscience paradigms. These data reveal the presence of a 30-km-thick crust that we argue to be of continental nature. This falsifies all the most recent palaeo-reconstructions of the Gondwana. This 30-km-thick continental crust 1,000 m below sea level implies a complex history with probable intrusions of mantle-derived melts in the lower crust, connected to several occurrences of magmatism, which seems to evidence the crucial role of the lower continental crust in passive margin genesis.
- Imaging early oceanic crust spreading in the Equatorial Atlantic Ocean: insights from the MAGIC wide-angle experimentPublication . Moulin, Maryline; Schnurle, Philippe; Afilhado, Alexandra; Gallais, Flora; Dias, Nuno; Evain, Mikael; Soares, José; Fuck, Reinhardt; Neto, Otaviano da Cruz Pessoa; Viana, Adriano; Aslanian, Daniel; Team, MAGICDuring the MAGIC (Margins of brAzil, Ghana, and Ivory Coast) experiment, five combined wide-angle, and reflection seismic profiles were acquired in the Pará-Maranhão/Barreirinhas/Ceará basins northern Brazil. This is a pull-apart passive margin, with two strike-slip borders. The equipment deployed includes 143 sea-bottom seismometers (OBS), a 4.5-km seismic streamer, and a 7587-in3 airgun array. In this paper, we focus on the distal parts of three profiles, and one entire transverse NW-SE profile, located on the presumed Cretaceous oceanic crust. Forward modelling of these wide-angle data sets reveals an E-W lateral evolution of the oceanic crust spreading initiation with: 1) just after the so-called intermediate domain, 60 km-wide domain that consists of a 5-km-thick crystalline crust. The basement presents two layers characterized by high acoustic velocity. This domain is bounded to the NW by a NW-SE volcanic line (Volcano Alignment), and 2) a 5-km-thick oceanic crust consisting of two layers characterized by “normal velocities” spanning between the two main fracture zones that fringe the Pará-Maranhão-Barreirinhas-Ceará segment. Despite a similar thickness, these two sub-domains present different velocity distribution in their two layers. They are both overlain by 5.5 km of sedimentary deposits. Forward wide-angle modelling confirms that the seafloor spreading process was progressive, with firstly the emplacement of a proto-oceanic crust, and then a thin oceanic crust. The “proto-oceanic” crust presents a similar seismic velocity with the intermediate domain interpreted as exhumed lower continental crust except for the lower part where the intruded lower crust gives place to a very sharp Moho at the base of the proto-oceanic domain. By contrast, the thin oceanic crust domain has a lower velocity structure in its upper layer, that is interpreted as basalt and is absent in the proto-oceanic crust. This eastward evolution, as also observed in the Provençal Basin, and the Santos Basin, suggests the involvement of the lower continental crust in the first steps of seafloor spreading.
- Lithospheric structuration onshore-offshore of the Sergipe-Alagoas passive margin, NE Brazil, based on wide-angle seismic dataPublication . Pinheiro, J. M.; Schnurle, P.; Evain, Mikael; Afilhado, Alexandra; Gallais, F.; Klingelhoefer, Frauke; Loureiro, Afonso; Fuck, R.; Soares, J.; Cupertino, J. A.; Viana, Adriano Roessler; Rabineau, Marina; Baltzer, A.; Benabdellouahed, M.; Dias, Nuno; Moulin, Maryline; Aslani, D.; Morvan, L.; Maze, J. P.; Pierre, D.; Roudaut-Pitel, M.; Rio, I.; Alves, D.; Barros, P.; Biari, Youssef; Corela, Carlos; Crozon, J.; Duarte, J. L.; Ducatel, C.; Falcão, C.; Fernagu, P.; Le Piver, D.; Mokeddem, Z.; Pelleau, P.; Rigoti, C.; Roest, W.; Roudaut, M.The structure and nature of the crust underlying the Camamu-Almada-Jequitinhonha-Sergipe-Alagoas basins System, in the NE Brazilian margin, were investigated based on the interpretation of 12 wide-angle seismic profiles acquired during the SALSA (Sergipe ALagoas Seismic Acquisition) experiment in 2014. In this work, we present two 220-km-long NW-SE combined wide-angle and reflection seismic profiles, SL 01 and SL 02, that have been acquired using 15 ocean-bottom-seismometers along each profile, offshore the southern part of the Sergipe Alagoas Basin (SAB), north of the Vaza-Barris Transfer zone. The SL 02 has a 150-km long inland continuation with 20 land-seismic-stations until the Sergipano Fold Belt (SFB). Wide-angle seismic forward modeling allows us to precisely divide the crust in three domains: beneath the continental shelf, a similar to 100 km wide necking zone is imaged where the continental crust thins from similar to 35 km on the Unthinned Continental Domain, which displays a three-layered crust structure, to less than 8 km on the Oceanic Crust Domain. In the necking zone, the upper and the middle layers thin dramatically and almost disappear, while the Moho discontinuity shows clear PmPs. The Continental-Oceanic Crust Boundary (COB) is located at similar to 80 km from the coastline and is marked by intracrustal seismic reflectors and changes in the seismic velocity, showing a sharp transition. On profile SL02, the oceanic crust is perturbed by a volcanic edifice together with an anomalous velocity zone underneath the area.