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Brasiliano crustal structure and the tectonic setting of the Parnaíba basin of NE Brazil: Results of a deep seismic reflection profile
Author(s) -
Daly Michael C.,
Andrade Vander,
Barousse Chuck A.,
Costa Rafaela,
McDowell Kenneth,
Piggott Neil,
Poole Alan J.
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
tectonics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.465
H-Index - 134
eISSN - 1944-9194
pISSN - 0278-7407
DOI - 10.1002/2014tc003632
Subject(s) - geology , basement , craton , amazonian , rift , precambrian , paleontology , shear zone , seismology , geochemistry , structural basin , geomorphology , tectonics , ecology , amazon rainforest , civil engineering , biology , engineering
Abstract A 1430 km, deep crustal, seismic reflection profile of the Parnaíba basin shows an asymmetric, structured western margin and a gently dipping eastern margin. The ~3 km thick, Phanerozoic sedimentary section overlies a pronounced, planar, regional unconformity that crosses three Precambrian blocks with differing seismic facies: the Amazonian/Araguaia block, the Parnaíba block, and the Borborema block. The blocks are separated by steep crustal‐scale boundaries across which seismic facies change abruptly. In the west, the ophiolitic metasedimentary rocks of the Araguaia Group overlie the Amazonian craton. Both craton and metasediments terminate eastward against a steep, east dipping fault zone defining the Amazonian/Araguaia block and Parnaíba block boundary. Reactivation of this Neoproterozoic margin in the Late Triassic and Late Jurassic/Early Cretaceous, folded and elevated basement and basin over 2 km. A second crustal boundary defines the eastern margin of the Parnaíba block with the Neoproterozoic Borborema block. This boundary is interpreted as the extension of the Transbrasiliano shear zone. These data demonstrate that the basement of the Parnaíba basin was formed during Brasiliano orogenesis by west directed collision‐related thrusting, succeeded by lateral accretion along steep, crustal‐scale boundaries. After formation of a post‐Brasiliano peneplain, the Parnaíba basin developed seamlessly across three very different crustal blocks and appears to have been significantly larger than its present outline. No extensive underlying rift system is evident suggesting that basement structure had little to do with basin formation, but that episodic reactivation of the boundary zones and basement fabric has controlled the structuring and preservation of the basin.