Publications des scientifiques de l'IRD

Ye J., Chardon Dominique, Rouby D., Guillocheau F., Dall'asta M., Ferry J. N., Broucke O. (2017). Paleogeographic and structural evolution of northwestern Africa and its Atlantic margins since the early Mesozoic. Geosphere, 13 (4), p. 1254-1284. ISSN 1553-040X.

Titre du document
Paleogeographic and structural evolution of northwestern Africa and its Atlantic margins since the early Mesozoic
Année de publication
2017
Type de document
Article référencé dans le Web of Science WOS:000418429300011
Auteurs
Ye J., Chardon Dominique, Rouby D., Guillocheau F., Dall'asta M., Ferry J. N., Broucke O.
Source
Geosphere, 2017, 13 (4), p. 1254-1284 ISSN 1553-040X
The geological evolution of northwestern Africa and its continental margins is investigated in the light of nine Meso-Cenozoic paleogeological maps, which integrate original minimal extent of sedimentary deposits beyond their present-day erosional limits. Mapping is based on a compilation of published original data on the stratigraphy and depositional environments of sediments, structures, magmatism, and low-temperature thermochonology, as well as on the interpretation of industrial seismic and borehole data. We show that rifting of the equatorial domain propagated eastward from the Central Atlantic between the Valanginian (ca. 140 Ma) and the Aptian (ca. 112 Ma) as an en echelon strike-slip and rift system connected to an inland rift network. This network defines a six-microplate synrift kinematic model for the African continental domain. We document persistent, long-wavelength eroding marginal upwarps that supplied clastic sediments to the offshore margin basins and a large intracratonic basin. The latter acted as a transient sediment reservoir because the products of its erosion were transferred both to the Tethys (to the north) and the Atlantic Ocean. This paired marginal upwarp-intra-cratonic basin source-to-sink system was perturbed by the growth of the late Paleogene Hoggar hotspot swell that fragmented the intracratonic basins into five residual depocenters. By linking the evolution of the continental margins to that of their African hinterland, this study bears important implications for the interplay of long-wavelength deformation and sediment transfers over paired shield-continental margin systems.
Plan de classement
Géologie et formations superficielles [064]
Description Géographique
AFRIQUE DU NORD ; AFRIQUE DE L'OUEST ; ATLANTIQUE
Localisation
Fonds IRD [F B010071885]
Identifiant IRD
fdi:010071885
Contact