Crustal heterogeneity and basement influence on the development of the Kenya Rift, East Africa
- 1 April 1993
- journal article
- Published by American Geophysical Union (AGU) in Tectonics
- Vol. 12 (2) , 591-606
- https://doi.org/10.1029/92tc01710
Abstract
Structural and metamorphic studies within the exposed Precambrian basement in Kenya indicate that a number of heterogeneities exist within the lithosphere beneath the line of the Kenya Rift. Of these, the most important is the mechanical and thermal contrast between thick, cold, and rigid Archean lithosphere and thinner anisotropic Proterozoic mobile belt crust/lithosphere. Structural, geophysical, and heat flow data indicate that during a late Proterozoic collisional event the margin of the Tanzanian Archean craton was reworked, overthrust, and effectively buried by tectonically emplaced “Mozambique Belt” rocks. Its position now lies some 100 km east and northeast of the exposed outcrop. These variations in crust/lithosphere type may be directly correlated with the morphotectonic and structural framework of the Kenya Rift and in particular are reflected in the spatial patterns of Cenozoic volcanism within the Gregory Rift zone. Along the craton margin and within the mobile belt a series of late Proterozoic continental‐scale NW‐SE and N‐S trending ductile/brittle shear zones are fundamental. The reactivation of these shear zones under varying stress field conditions is presented as a model to account for the patterns of rift subsidence, including the location and geometry of graben structures, and the intrusion of magmas since early Miocene times.Keywords
This publication has 59 references indexed in Scilit:
- Deformation produced by oblique riftingPublished by Elsevier ,2003
- Fault systems and stress patterns on emerged oceanic ridges: a case study in IcelandPublished by Elsevier ,2003
- Fault geometries in basement-induced wrench faulting under different initial stress statesPublished by Elsevier ,2003
- Strike-slip faulting in continental rifts: examples from Sabukia, East Africa (1928), and other regionsTectonophysics, 1991
- Two-stage model of African absolute motion during the last 30 million yearsTectonophysics, 1991
- Post-Pan-African tectonic evolution of South Malawi in relation to the Karroo and recent East African rift systemsTectonophysics, 1991
- Relationships between pre-rift structure and rift architecture in Lakes Tanganyika and Malawi, East AfricaNature, 1989
- The structure of the cross-cutting volcanic chain of Northern Tanzania and its relation to the East African rift systemTectonophysics, 1980
- Report on airmagnetic surveys of two areas in the Kenya rift valley ag]Tectonophysics, 1972
- The Kenya Rift volcanics: A note on volumes and chemical compositionTectonophysics, 1972