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- New evidence of Late Cretaceous magmatism on the offshore central West Iberian Margin (Estremadura Spur) from potential field dataPublication . Escada, Cláudia; Represas, Patricia; Santos, Fernando Monteiro; Pereira, Ricardo; Mata, João; Rosas, Filipe M.ABSTRACT: The West Iberian Margin (WIM) is a key example of a magma-poor passive margin, punctuated by several postrift magmatic manifestations that are part of the Late Cretaceous Atlantic Alkaline Province. In this work, potential field (gravity and magnetics) data, constrained by 3D multichannel seismic reflection data, are used to describe and characterise the geometry and nature of magmatic features located offshore the central segment of the margin, the Estremadura Spur. The estimated geometry and nature of the magmatic features was achieved through the integration of 3D gravity and magnetic inversion and 2D magnetic forward modelling. The results provide an insightful 3D subsurface model revealing that: 1) the Estremadura Spur Intrusion represents a 28 x 15 km wide laccolith with an overall granitic nature and an estimated density of 2490-2640 kg/m3 and 0.01-0.05 SI magnetic susceptibility, 2) the 26 x 17 km Fontanelas buried volcano is dominantly basaltic, with density values of 2500-2821 kg/m3 and magnetic susceptibility of 0.01 to 0.0875 SI, and 3) multiple sill complexes intruded the region, thus producing a higher magnetic background on otherwise inconspicuous anomalies The models allowed achieving a confident fit suggesting that both the ESI and the Fontanelas volcano are coeval with the outcropping magmatic features from this same magmatic event. Additionally, the results support that Late Cretaceous alkaline magmatism on the West Iberian Margin is more significant than anticipated and provide further evidence to clarify unclear geometrical aspects of similar intrusions observed onshore. Acknowledging the geometry and nature of these magmatic entities allows to better understand the role of postrift intra-plate magmatism on continental hyper-extended rifted margins by clarifying how shallow plumbing systems evolve in these settings.
- Interplay of tectonics and magmatism during post-rift inversion on the central West Iberian Margin (Estremadura Spur)Publication . Pereira, Ricardo; Rosas, Filipe M.; Mata, João; Represas, Patricia; Escada, Cláudia; Silva, BeatrizABSTRACT: The combined effects of post-rift magma emplacement and tectonic inversion on the hyper-extended West Iberian Margin are unravelled in detail using multichan nel 2D/3D seismic data. The Estremadura Spur, acting as an uplifted crustal block bounded by two first-order transfer zones, shows evidence of four post-rift tectonic events each with a distinctive seismic-stratigraphic response that can be used to dem onstrate the tectono-magmatic interplay, namely: (a) the Campanian onset of mag matism (including the Fontanelas Volcano, the widespread evidence of multiple sill complexes and the detailed description of a >20 km long laccolith, the Estremadura Spur Intrusion; (b) the Campanian-Maastrichtian NE-SW event pervasively affecting the area, resulting in regional uplift, reverse faulting and folding; (c) the Paleocene mid Eocene inversion that resulted in widespread erosion and; (d) the Oligocene-mid Miocene evidence of rejuvenated NW-SE inversion marked by crestal faulting and forced-fault folding establishing the final geometry of the area. The distinct deforma tion styles within each tectonic phase document a case of decoupled deformation be tween Late Cretaceous and Tertiary units, in response to the predominant stress field evolution, revealing that the magnitude of Late Cretaceous inversion is far more sig nificant than the one affecting the latter units. A detailed analysis of the laccolith and its overburden demonstrate the distinct deformation patterns associated both with magma ascent (including extensional faulting, forced-folding and concentric reverse faulting) and its interference as a rigid intrusive body during subsequent transpres sive inversion. This reinforces the role that the combined tectono-magmatic events played on the margin. Also analysed is the wider impact of post-rift magmatism and the associate emplacement of sub-lithospheric magma on the rheology of a thinned continental crust. This takes into account the simultaneous tectonic inversion of the margin, the implied alternative views on characteristic heat flow, and on how these can be incorporated in source rock organic maturity modelling.