doctoralThesis
Influência da reativação rúptil de zonas de cisalhamento continentais e da Zona de Fratura Romanche na evolução da Margem Equatorial do Brasil
Fecha
2022-03-09Registro en:
TAVARES, Aline Cristine. Influência da reativação rúptil de zonas de cisalhamento continentais e da Zona de Fratura Romanche na evolução da Margem Equatorial do Brasil. 2022. 117f. Tese (Doutorado em Geodinâmica e Geofísica) - Centro de Ciências Exatas e da Terra, Universidade Federal do Rio Grande do Norte, Natal, 2022.
Autor
Tavares, Aline Cristine
Resumen
The separation between the South American and African continents, in the Lower
Cretaceous, was strongly conditioned by the Precambrian structural fabric of
amalgamated crustal blocks along extensive ductile shear zones originated during the
Brasiliano Orogeny (720-540 Ma). This dissertation investigates the tectonic role of
the brittle reactivation of Precambrian shear zones (especially the Transbrasiliano
Lineament) and the Romanche Fracture Zone (RFZ) in forming the central part of the
Brazilian Equatorial Margin. To this end, gravimetric, magnetic, elevation, seismic and
well data were compiled, processed and integrated. The brittle reactivations of these
continental-scale shear zones occurred mainly where there was high mechanical
contrast between Precambrian terrains, compartmentalizing the continental margins
on both sides of the Equatorial Atlantic. In this context, the RFZ divides this sector of
the Equatorial Margin into one E-W-transform and two NW-SE-oblique divergent
segments. Gravimetric models along regional seismic sections reveal distinct crustal
behaviors for each segment: south of the RFZ, a divergent margin with a crustal stretch
of ~90 km; along the RFZ, a transforming margin with little extended continental crust
(~30 km); and to the north of the RFZ, another divergent segment shows a
hyperextended continental crust up to 160 km long on the continental shelf. The Moho
discontinuity and the internal geometry of the sedimentary basins were also modeled,
completing the lithospheric characterization of the Equatorial Margin. The basins
South of RFZ are thicker than those to the North because this structure acted as a
barrier to the deposition of continental sediments in the oceanic regions. The boundary
between continental and oceanic crusts identified in the present work is also consistent
with previous studies. However, it diverges from these studies north of the RFZ due to
the hyperextended continental crust described here. These shear zones arrest at the
RFZ, where the continent-ocean crustal boundary occurs. The structures (faults and
folds) related to brittle reactivation of the shear zones are compatible with an initially
extensional stress field during the rift phase up to the Aptian. This stress field inverted
to strike-slip after the main breakup phase, with the direction of maximum compression
varying from vertical to horizontal from Aptian to Present.