Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Tantalising new magnetic views of Precambrian and Pan-African age crustal architecture in interior East Antarctica
View through CrossRef
<p>East Antarctica is the least understood continent on Earth due to its vast size, major ice sheet cover and remoteness. Coastal outcrops and glacial erratics have yielded cryptic but nevertheless fascinating clues into up to 3 billion years of East Antarctica&#8217;s geological and tectonic evolution. These geological constraints represent in turn the pillars to address global geodynamic linkages between East Antarctica, Australia, India, South Africa and Laurentia in the growth, assembly and dispersal of Gondwana, Rodinia and Nuna during the complex evolution of Earth's supercontinent cycles. However, due to the lack of drilling, our ability to project, test and augment such supercontinental linkages and several speculative geological interpretations in the interior of the continent beneath the East Antarctic Ice Sheet remains very limited.</p><p>While airborne and satellite gravity data and seismology are providing key new constraints on crustal and lithosphere thickness and help unveil large-scale heterogeneity in the East Antarctic lithosphere, detailed imaging of the architecture of individual crustal domains and their tectonic boundaries relies critically on magnetic anomaly data interpretation.</p><p>Here we exploit ongoing analyses of a recent continental-scale magnetic anomaly compilation (ADMAP 2.0) (Golynsky et al., 2018, GRL) augmented by major new datasets we recently collected, processed and compiled over the Recovery and South Pole frontiers and enhanced satellite magnetic imaging to:</p><p>1) reveal a more complex mosaic of distinct but in several places still cryptic Precambrian crustal provinces that represent the building blocks of interior East Antarctica;</p><p>2) provide new geophysical constraints that can be used to test different hypotheses of East-West Gondwana amalgamation along several candidate suture zones, including in particular the Shackleton suture zone, which provides a unique window on several distinct Precambrian terranes at the inferred leading edge of the composite Mawson Continent, as well as unique occurrences of Pan-African age rocks of ophiolitic affinity and</p><p>3) re-assess potential paths and the significance of the Kuunga suture zone between Greater India and East Antarctica and re-evaluate the tectonic origin of a major magnetic and gravity lineament previously thought to delineate the Indo-Australo-Antarctic suture and finally</p><p>4) propose new surveys in other frontier regions including in particular the under-explored interior of Princess Elizabeth Land and Recovery Subglacial Highlands that are critical in order to test the possible connectivity of the Kuunga, Gamburstev and potentially also Shackleton suture zones.&#160;</p><p>Finally, we showcase examples of how we are combining aeromagnetic and gravity interpretations for East Antarctica with global magnetic and gravity datasets, geochronology, geochemistry, geology, tectonics and paleomagnetic data in an evolving plate kinematic framework (in GPlates) to re-assess supercontinent reconstructions with particular emphasis so far on Nuna and Gondwana.</p>
Title: Tantalising new magnetic views of Precambrian and Pan-African age crustal architecture in interior East Antarctica
Description:
<p>East Antarctica is the least understood continent on Earth due to its vast size, major ice sheet cover and remoteness.
Coastal outcrops and glacial erratics have yielded cryptic but nevertheless fascinating clues into up to 3 billion years of East Antarctica&#8217;s geological and tectonic evolution.
These geological constraints represent in turn the pillars to address global geodynamic linkages between East Antarctica, Australia, India, South Africa and Laurentia in the growth, assembly and dispersal of Gondwana, Rodinia and Nuna during the complex evolution of Earth's supercontinent cycles.
However, due to the lack of drilling, our ability to project, test and augment such supercontinental linkages and several speculative geological interpretations in the interior of the continent beneath the East Antarctic Ice Sheet remains very limited.
</p><p>While airborne and satellite gravity data and seismology are providing key new constraints on crustal and lithosphere thickness and help unveil large-scale heterogeneity in the East Antarctic lithosphere, detailed imaging of the architecture of individual crustal domains and their tectonic boundaries relies critically on magnetic anomaly data interpretation.
</p><p>Here we exploit ongoing analyses of a recent continental-scale magnetic anomaly compilation (ADMAP 2.
0) (Golynsky et al.
, 2018, GRL) augmented by major new datasets we recently collected, processed and compiled over the Recovery and South Pole frontiers and enhanced satellite magnetic imaging to:</p><p>1) reveal a more complex mosaic of distinct but in several places still cryptic Precambrian crustal provinces that represent the building blocks of interior East Antarctica;</p><p>2) provide new geophysical constraints that can be used to test different hypotheses of East-West Gondwana amalgamation along several candidate suture zones, including in particular the Shackleton suture zone, which provides a unique window on several distinct Precambrian terranes at the inferred leading edge of the composite Mawson Continent, as well as unique occurrences of Pan-African age rocks of ophiolitic affinity and</p><p>3) re-assess potential paths and the significance of the Kuunga suture zone between Greater India and East Antarctica and re-evaluate the tectonic origin of a major magnetic and gravity lineament previously thought to delineate the Indo-Australo-Antarctic suture and finally</p><p>4) propose new surveys in other frontier regions including in particular the under-explored interior of Princess Elizabeth Land and Recovery Subglacial Highlands that are critical in order to test the possible connectivity of the Kuunga, Gamburstev and potentially also Shackleton suture zones.
&#160;</p><p>Finally, we showcase examples of how we are combining aeromagnetic and gravity interpretations for East Antarctica with global magnetic and gravity datasets, geochronology, geochemistry, geology, tectonics and paleomagnetic data in an evolving plate kinematic framework (in GPlates) to re-assess supercontinent reconstructions with particular emphasis so far on Nuna and Gondwana.
</p>.
Related Results
Magnetic cloak made of NdFeB permanent magnetic material
Magnetic cloak made of NdFeB permanent magnetic material
In the past few years, the concept of an electromagnetic invisibility cloak has received much attention. Based on the pioneering theoretical work, invisibility cloaks have been gre...
Social innovation : understanding selected Durban-based interior designers' perceptions of socially responsible interior design
Social innovation : understanding selected Durban-based interior designers' perceptions of socially responsible interior design
In a world with pressing social issues that require the collaboration of multiple stakeholders to solve them, this research sought to find out through the views of interior design ...
A New Progress of the Proterozoic Chronostratigraphical Division
A New Progress of the Proterozoic Chronostratigraphical Division
AbstractThe Precambrian, an informal chronostratigraphical unit, represents the period of Earth history from the start of the Cambrian at ca. 541 Ma back to the formation of the pl...
Implications of magnetic secular variation for interpretation of crustal field anomalies
Implications of magnetic secular variation for interpretation of crustal field anomalies
<p>We usually think of crustal magnetic anomalies as static (barring some major seismic or thermal disruption).&#160; But a significant portion of the crustal...
Geology of the Questa Molybdenum (Moly) mine area, Taos County, New Mexico
Geology of the Questa Molybdenum (Moly) mine area, Taos County, New Mexico
The Questa molybdenum mine (Moly mine), 6 mi east of Questa, in the Taos Range of the Sangre de Cristo Mountains, Taos County, NM, is unique in containing high-grade molybdenite or...
Characterization of Inducible HSP70 Genes in an Antarctic Yeast, Glaciozyma antarctica PI12, in Response to Thermal Stress
Characterization of Inducible HSP70 Genes in an Antarctic Yeast, Glaciozyma antarctica PI12, in Response to Thermal Stress
The induction of highly conserved heat shock protein 70 (HSP70) is often related to a cellular response due to harmful stress or adverse life conditions. In this study, we determin...
“Olympic Dam-Type” Deposits and Geology of Middle Proterozoic Rocks in the St. Francois Mountains Terrane, Missouri
“Olympic Dam-Type” Deposits and Geology of Middle Proterozoic Rocks in the St. Francois Mountains Terrane, Missouri
Abstract
The midcontinent of the United States hosts some of the world's largest, economically most valuable mineral districts and metallogenic provinces. The Precam...
Modeling the Martian Crustal Magnetic Field Using Data from MGS, MAVEN, and Tianwen-
Modeling the Martian Crustal Magnetic Field Using Data from MGS, MAVEN, and Tianwen-
IntroductionMars does not have a global dipole magnetic field as is the case for Earth, but it possesses localized remanent magnetic fields originating in the Martian lithosphere, ...

