Continental rifting and transform faulting along the Jurassic Transantarctic Rift, Antarctica
Open Access
- 1 April 1986
- journal article
- Published by American Geophysical Union (AGU) in Tectonics
- Vol. 5 (2) , 279-291
- https://doi.org/10.1029/tc005i002p00279
Abstract
The Transantarctic rift, an extensional continental rift valley, formed between East and West Antarctica during latest Early and Middle Jurassic time and is represented today by the high Transantarctic Mountains, which contain large volumes of continental flood basalt, diabase, and gabbro. Transantarctic rifting marked the beginning of the breakup of Gondwanaland; it was contiguous and synchronous with continental rifting between East Antarctica‐India and Africa as represented by the continental basalt and diabase of Queen Maud Land and the Karroo of southern Africa. During Late Jurassic time, about 150 Ma or slightly earlier, East and West Gondwanaland separated and new oceanic crust of the earliest Indian Ocean formed between East Antarctica‐India and Africa. If, as assumed, West Antarctica and South America remained fixed through a tip‐to‐tip join between the Antarctic Peninsula and Tierra del Fuego, then this seafloor spreading required major right‐lateral transform faulting of 500 to 1000 km on the Transantarctic rift system between East and West Antarctica. The Transantarctic Mountains were elevated at about the same time in Late Jurassic; such uplifts are characteristic of active rift margins worldwide. During Cenozoic time, extensional block faulting, independent of the Jurassic rifting, further disrupted large areas of West Antarctica. During the same time, the Transantarctic Mountains were further uplifted.Keywords
This publication has 44 references indexed in Scilit:
- Uplift history of the Transantarctic Mountains in the Dry Valleys area, southern Victoria Land, Antarctica, from apatite fission track agesNew Zealand Journal of Geology and Geophysics, 1984
- A general account of Karoo vulcanicity in southern AfricaInternational Journal of Earth Sciences, 1983
- West Antarctica: Problem child of GondwanalandTectonics, 1982
- A revised fit of East and West GondwanalandTectonophysics, 1980
- Towards a more certain reconstruction of GondwanalandPhilosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London. B, Biological Sciences, 1977
- Evidence for the Opening of the South Atlantic in the Early CretaceousNature, 1973
- Late Paleozoic Glaciation: Part III, AntarcticaGSA Bulletin, 1971
- K–Ar Age of the Deccan Traps, IndiaNature, 1970
- KAr age determinations on basaltic rocks from south-west Africa and their bearing on continental driftEarth and Planetary Science Letters, 1968
- Geology of the area between the Axel Heiberg and Shackleton Glaciers, Queen Maud Range, AntarcticaNew Zealand Journal of Geology and Geophysics, 1965