Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
6441578 Marine Geology 2015 9 Pages PDF
Abstract
Wide-angle seismic profiles reveal anomalously thick crust with a high-velocity (> 7.3 km s− 1) zone under the Sierra Leone Rise, a major mid-plate elevation in the Atlantic lying between the Cape Verde platform and the Cameroon Volcanic Line. A profile recorded over the crest using an ocean-bottom seismometer and surface sonobuoys shows that beneath a 3 km water layer and 1 km of sediments, the basement extends to 16-20 km below sea level. Most velocity-depth values fall outside the expected range for Mesozoic-early Cenozoic ocean floor and stretched continental crust. The detection of 7.3-7.5 km s− 1 material beneath thick, lower-velocity volcanics suggests that magmatic underplating of the crust has occurred. A prominent change in velocity gradient 10-12 km below sea level may mark the transition to underplated material emplaced during the late Cretaceous-early Cenozoic. A pronounced change in Moho depth lies on the line of a long offset fracture zone extending from the African margin, implying underplating was influenced by a pre-existing discontinuity in the lithosphere. Other seismic lines show 7.0-7.2 km s− 1 basement above the underplated zone extending into water depths of almost 5 km. This is probably the intrusive foundation of early-formed crust over a mantle hot-spot. It is suggested that the development of the Sierra Leone Rise is distinct from other Atlantic hot-spot features to which it has been linked because of its setting in a region of intense lithospheric shear.
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Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Geochemistry and Petrology
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