4.7 Article

New paleomagnetic and geochronologic results from Ethiopian Afar:: Block rotations linked to rift overlap and propagation and determination of a ∼2 Ma reference pole for stable Africa -: art. no. 2102

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AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1029/2001JB000645

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Afar tectonics; block rotation; rift propagation and overlap; reference pole; polarity timescale; inclination anomaly

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[1] Joint French-Ethiopian field trips in 1995-1996 yield new geochronologic and paleomagnetic data, which significantly expand our knowledge of the recent magmatic and tectonic history of the Afar depression. Twenty-four new K-Ar ages range from 0.6 to 3.3 Ma. There is quite good agreement between magnetic polarities and Geomagnetic Polarity Timescale (GPTS). Eight age determinations with uncertainty less than 50 kyr can be used in future reassessments of the GPTS ( upper and lower Olduvai/ Matuyama reversals and Reunion and Mammoth subchrons). Paleomagnetic analysis of 865 cores from 133 sites confirms that low-Ti magnetites are the main carrier of the Characteristic Remanent Magnetization (ChRM). A positive tilt test ( based on two subgroups with 63 and 23 sites, respectively) confirms that this ChRM is likely the primary magnetization. The main paleomagnetic results can be summarized as follows. A similar to2 Ma reference pole for stable Africa is determined based on 26 sites located on either side of the northern termination of the East African rift. It is located at lambda = 87.2 degreesN, phi = 217.1 degreesE (A(95) = 4degrees). A 4.6 +/- 1.8degrees (2sigma) inclination shallowing is identified within a population of 231 stratoid lava flows, consistent with a global axial quadrupole of 6 +/- 2% of the axial dipole. Combined with earlier data of Acton et al. [ 2000], our new data allow mean paleomagnetic field directions to be determined for five individual, fault-bounded blocks previously identified by tectonic analysis within central Afar. These all have suffered negligible rotations about vertical axes since emplacement of the lava. This contrasts with the significant rotations previously uncovered to the east in Djiboutian Afar for three major individual blocks. Taken altogether, the declination differences with respect to reference directions are 2 +/- 4degrees for central Afar and 13 +/- 4degrees for eastern Afar, consistent with the model of Manighetti et al. [2001a]. It appears that in the last similar to3 Ma the Afar depression was extensively floored by trap-like basalts, which were deformed by a single but complex physical ( tectonic) process, combining diffuse extension, rift localization, propagation, jumps and overlap, and bookshelf faulting.

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