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Strike‐slip faults parallel to crustal spreading axes: data from Iceland and the Afar Depression
Author(s) -
Passerini Pietro,
Marcucci Marta,
Sguazzoni Giovanni,
Zan Leonardo,
Haga Abdourahman Omar
Publication year - 1991
Publication title -
terra nova
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.353
H-Index - 89
eISSN - 1365-3121
pISSN - 0954-4879
DOI - 10.1111/j.1365-3121.1991.tb00203.x
Subject(s) - geology , rift , seismology , triple junction , tectonics , strike slip tectonics , slip (aerodynamics) , plate tectonics , fault (geology) , geophysics , physics , thermodynamics
ABSTRACT Slickenside studies in regions of crustal spreading such as Iceland and the Afar Depression, East Africa, reveal that a significant number of faults parallel and close to rift axes are strike‐slip rather than normal. Therefore, the pattern of brittle deformation in these regions does not conform to the classic two‐dimensional schemes of oceanic tectonics and pre‐oceanic rifting. Dip‐slip and strike‐slip faulting presumably alternated along or in the vicinity of spreading axes, indicate a varying stress field and a combination of transverse and longitudinal movements. In Iceland, strike‐slip faults parallel to rifts are observed both west and east of the rift system as well as in a median area between overlapping rifts; the mechanisms proposed for their origin include accommodation of oblique convergence or divergence of crustal sections due to variations of spreading directions along axis and the interaction of overlapping rifts. In the Afar Depression this kind of fault is recorded west of the rift of Asal and can be imputed to reflect an interaction among rifts in the vicinity of the Afar triple junction. Rift‐parallel strike‐slip faults cannot however be assumed to be a feature of all crustal spreading axes due to the peculiarity of the examined regions: both of them are hot‐spot areas and the Afar Depression lies at a triple junction.

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