Hyperextension: a new model to comprehend continental breakup
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Published
27-01-2021
Martin Ladron de Guevara
Arantxa Bodego
Eneko Iriarte
Abstract
Continental breakup is a geological process which has been deeply learnt. The keys of that tectonic phenomena, the so-called rifting process that lasts millions of years, can be found worldwide within rifted margins, mountain chains and other geological settings. However, the interpretation of tectonic plate rupture evolves while researcher´s comprehension and technology advance. Hyperextension is the last update within that interpretation. This revolutionary idea involves the extreme polyphasic extensional deformation of the continental lithosphere. Characteristic geological structures and structural domains identified within passive margins and orogenic belts, allow to define the evolution of this phenomena. Domains such as the proximal domain, necking domain, distal or hyperextended domain and outer domain are distinguishing features within magma poor rifted margins. These domains are linked to specific deformation phases during rifting, being stretching and thinning of continental lithosphere, mantle exhumation and oceanic crust spreading part of these process. As said, research is being carried out in hyperextended basins, and the evolution of the Iberia-Eurasia Mesozoic rift system, which involves the Basque-Cantabrian Basin (BCB), is already being understood within that hypothesis. Data collected over years in the BCB, at least, suggest that. Mantle exhumation described in the western Pyrenees and several processes linked to that within the BCB, reinforces the significance that hyperextension could have occurred during the Cretaceous rifting, shedding light to the paradigm concerning the evolution of the BCB.
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Keywords
Rifting, hyperextension, plate-tectonics, Basque-Cantabrian Basin
Issue
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Ale Arrunta
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