Uplift of the Transantarctic Mountains and the bedrock beneath the East Antarctic ice sheet
- 10 December 1997
- journal article
- Published by American Geophysical Union (AGU) in Journal of Geophysical Research
- Vol. 102 (B12) , 27603-27621
- https://doi.org/10.1029/97jb02483
Abstract
In recent years the Transantarctic Mountains (TAM), the largest noncontractional mountain belt in the world, have become the focus of modelers who explained their uplift by a variety of isostatic and thermal mechanisms. A problem with these models is a lack of available data to compare with model predictions. We report here the results of a 312‐km‐long geophysical traverse conducted in 1993/1994 in the hinterland of the TAM. Using detailed subglacial topography and gravity measurements, we confirm the origin of the TAM as a flexural uplift of the edge of East Antarctica. Using an elastic model with a free edge, we can jointly fit the topography and the gravity with a plate having an elastic thickness of 85±15 km and a preuplift elevation of 700±50 m for East Antarctica. Using a variety of evidence, we argue that the uplift is coincident with a relatively minor tectonic event of transtensional motion between East and West Antarctica during the Eocene rather than the Late Cretaceous rifting event that created the Ross Embayment. We suggest that this transtensional motion caused the continuous plate to break, which created an escarpment that significantly increased the rates of erosion and exhumation. Results from the geophysical traverse also extend our knowledge of the bedrock geology from the exposures within the TAM to the ice covered interior. Our interpretation suggests that the Ferrar flood basalts extend at least 100 km westward under the ice. The Beacon Supergroup of Paleozoic and Mesozoic sediments thins gradually under the ice and its reconstructed thickness is reminiscent of profiles of foreland basins. Finally, there is no indication in the gravity field for an incomplete rebound due to significant melting of the East Antarctic ice sheet since the last glacial period.Keywords
This publication has 48 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Australia‐Pacific boundary and Cenozoic plate motions in the SW Pacific: Some constraints from Geosat dataTectonics, 1995
- Seismic velocity structure and composition of the continental crust: A global viewJournal of Geophysical Research, 1995
- Cenozoic transtension along the Transantarctic Mountains‐West Antarctic rift boundary, southern Victoria Land, AntarcticaTectonics, 1995
- Subduction, platform subsidence, and foreland thrust loading: The late Tertiary development of Taranaki Basin, New ZealandTectonics, 1994
- Thermochronologic constraints on post‐Paleozoic tectonic evolution of the central Transantarctic Mountains, AntarcticaTectonics, 1994
- Crustal structure and magmatism of North Atlantic continental marginsJournal of the Geological Society, 1992
- Finite element analysis of Transantarctic Mountain uplift and coeval subsidence in the Ross EmbaymentTectonophysics, 1992
- The Earth's gravity field and plate tectonicsTectonophysics, 1991
- A petrologic geotherm from a continental rift in AntarcticaEarth and Planetary Science Letters, 1989
- Sedimentary basins of the east antarctic craton from geophysical evidenceTectonophysics, 1976