Influence of offset weak zones on the development of rift basins: Activation and abandonment during continental extension and breakup

Publisher: John Wiley & Sons Inc

E-ISSN: 2169-9356|118|4|1698-1720

ISSN: 2169-9313

Source: JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH: SOLID EARTH, Vol.118, Iss.4, 2013-04, pp. : 1698-1720

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Abstract

We use numerical modelling to investigate reactivation of inherited Offset Weak Zones (OWZ) in continental crust and Mantle Weak Zones (MWZ) to form offset rift basins during continental rifting and breakup. Offset rift basins are basins that are set off/offset from the main rift/locus of breakup. Weak zones embedded in a stiff layer are preferentially and rapidly reactivated, whereas the same zones are either ignored or slowly reactivated when embedded in pliable layers. Here stiff implies a nonlinear flow law with a high stress exponent (n  > ∼  10,000), a plastic material, and pliable means a low stress exponent (n ∼ 2–5) as in ductile, power‐law creep of rocks. Whether offset rift basins form during rifting of a composite lithosphere (i.e., comprising stiff and pliable layers) depends on the competition between necking instabilities that develop at the weak zones in the stiff layers, and the coupling between the stiff and pliable layers. Stiff/cratonic lithosphere results in early localization of the deformation at the MWZ, rapid necking and breakup without developing offset rift basins. In contrast, warm pliable lithosphere develops significant offset basins and has protracted rifting because the MWZ is now embedded in a pliable layer. We also investigate the influence of OWZ dip, sedimentation, and the sensitivity of reactivation to the distance from OWZ to the MWZ, and to the size of the MWZ. A tectonic rifting styles diagram is used to show that the model results agree with natural examples.