The Najd Fault System, Saudi Arabia and Egypt: A Late Precambrian rift‐related transform system?
- 1 August 1985
- journal article
- Published by American Geophysical Union (AGU) in Tectonics
- Vol. 4 (5) , 497-511
- https://doi.org/10.1029/tc004i005p00497
Abstract
The Najd Fault System is a complex set of left‐lateral strike‐slip faults and ductile shear zones that strike NW‐SE across the Precambrian of Arabia and Egypt. This system was developed during the interval 540–620 Ma. It is up to 400 km wide with an exposed length of 1100 km; inferred buried extensions of the Najd give it a total length of 2000 km. It is the best exposed and may be the largest pre‐Mesozoic zone of transcurrent faulting on earth. Previous models for the Najd Fault System suggest it formed as a result of a major Late Precambrian continent‐continent collision. This model is not preferred here because (1) the lack of evidence for a pre‐Late Precambrian continent to the east of the Najd Fault System; (2) the difference between the orientation of the Najd Fault System and that predicted by slip‐line theory; (3) the younger age of Najd movements compared with that of collisional sutures in the Arabian Shield; and (4) lack of evidence for wide‐spread crustal uplift that would be expected to accompany collision. A new model for the origin of the Najd Fault System accounts for each of these objections: The Najd Fault System formed in response to a broad zone of NW‐SE directed crustal extension that accompanied juvenile continental crustal formation in northernmost Afro‐Arabia. This model also accounts for the following observations: (1) Strands of the Najd parallel the direction of extension in the North Eastern Desert of Egypt and Sinai; (2) the timing of the principal rifting movements (ca. 575–600 Ma) overlap with those of the Najd (ca. 560–620 Ma); (3) in spite of observation (2), the Najd Fault System is not recognized in northernmost Afro‐Arabia; instead the Najd deformation becomes increasingly ductile and these zones are more commonly intruded by sheared and foliated granites as the principal zone of extension is approached. The Najd Fault System thus represents a set of continental transforms developed in response to a major episode of Late Precambrian extensional continental crust formation in northernmost Afro‐Arabia.Keywords
This publication has 37 references indexed in Scilit:
- Discussion on the Upper Proterozoic ophiolite mélange zones of the easternmost Arabian ShieldJournal of the Geological Society, 1984
- Island arcs and their role in the evolution of the western Arabian ShieldGSA Bulletin, 1984
- Strain Analysis of Wrench Faults and Collision Tectonics of the Arabian-Nubian ShieldThe Journal of Geology, 1984
- Lead isotope systematics of some igneous rocks from the Egyptian shieldPrecambrian Research, 1983
- Distribution of oceanic and continental leads in the Arabian-Nubian ShieldContributions to Mineralogy and Petrology, 1983
- Petrogenesis and tectonic setting of late Precambrian ensimatic volcanic rocks, central eastern desert of EgyptPrecambrian Research, 1981
- The Volcanic Massif of Biq'at Hayareah (Sinai-Negev): A Case of Potassium MetasomatismThe Journal of Geology, 1981
- A lead isotope study of mineralization in the Saudi Arabian ShieldContributions to Mineralogy and Petrology, 1980
- An evaluation of the zircon method of isotopic dating in the Southern Arabian CratonContributions to Mineralogy and Petrology, 1979
- A discussion on the structure and evolution of the Red Sea and the nature of the Red Sea, Gulf of Aden and Ethiopia rift junction - Interpretation of satellite photographs of the Red Sea and Gulf of AdenPhilosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series A, Mathematical and Physical Sciences, 1970