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Deep structure of the Santos Basin-São Paulo Plateau System, SE Brazil

Authors :
Philippe Schnurle
Massinissa Benabdellouahed
Alexandra Afilhado
Dorismar David Alves
Marina Rabineau
Caesar Augusto Rigoti
Mikael Evain
R. A. Fuck
Daniel Aslanian
Adriano R. Viana
Aurelie Feld
Luis Matias
José Eduardo P. Soares
M. Vinicius Aparecido Gomes de Lima
Frauke Klingelhoefer
Agnès Baltzer
Afonso Loureiro
Carlos Corela
Maryline Moulin
Source :
Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth. 120:5401-5431
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
American Geophysical Union (AGU), 2015.

Abstract

The structure and nature of the crust underlying the Santos Basin-Sao Paulo Plateau System (SSPS), in the SE Brazilian margin, are discussed based on five wide-angle seismic profiles acquired during the Santos Basin (SanBa) experiment in 2011. Velocity models allow us to precisely divide the SSPS in six domains from unthinned continental crust (Domain CC) to normal oceanic crust (Domain OC). A seventh domain (Domain D), a triangular shape region in the SE of the SSPS, is discussed by Klingelhoefer et al. (2014). Beneath the continental shelf, a ~100 km wide necking zone (Domain N) is imaged where the continental crust thins abruptly from ~40 km to less than 15 km. Toward the ocean, most of the SSPS (Domains A and C) shows velocity ranges, velocity gradients, and a Moho interface characteristic of the thinned continental crust. The central domain (Domain B) has, however, a very heterogeneous structure. While its southwestern part still exhibits extremely thinned (7 km) continental crust, its northeastern part depicts a 2–4 km thick upper layer (6.0–6.5 km/s) overlying an anomalous velocity layer (7.0–7.8 km/s) and no evidence of a Moho interface. This structure is interpreted as atypical oceanic crust, exhumed lower crust, or upper continental crust intruded by mafic material, overlying either altered mantle in the first two cases or intruded lower continental crust in the last case. The deep structure and v-shaped segmentation of the SSPS confirm that an initial episode of rifting occurred there obliquely to the general opening direction of the South Atlantic Central Segment.

Details

ISSN :
21699313
Volume :
120
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........0ec66e903fa80f676bc6ed7d5137feff
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/2014jb011561