Back to Search Start Over

New geophysical data from a key region in East Antarctica: Estimates for the spatial extent of the Tonian Oceanic Arc Super Terrane (TOAST)

Authors :
Ruppel, Antonia
Jacobs, Joachim
Eagles, Graeme
Läufer, Andreas
Jokat, Wilfried
Ruppel, Antonia
Jacobs, Joachim
Eagles, Graeme
Läufer, Andreas
Jokat, Wilfried
Source :
EPIC3Gondwana Research, ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV, 59, pp. 97-107, ISSN: 1342-937X
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Within Antarctica, eastern Dronning Maud Land (DML) represents a key region for improving our understanding of crustal fragments that were involved in the amalgamation and breakup histories of Rodinia and Gondwana. An aerogeophysical survey was flown during the austral summers 2013/14 and 2014/15 to explore the largely ice- covered region south and east of Sør Rondane. Here, we present 40,000 new line kilometer of aeromagnetic data gathered across an area of ca. 295,000 km2 with a 10 km line spacing. Magnetic domains, major lineaments, lo- cations, and depths of magnetic source bodies are detected from total field data, their tilt derivative, pseudo- gravity, and analytical signal transformations, and from Euler Deconvolution maps. These data are integrated with exposure information from the Sør Rondane, Belgica and the Yamato mountains in order to identify the eastern spatial extent of a major juvenile Early Neoproterozoic crustal province, the Tonian Oceanic Arc Super Terrane (TOAST). Magnetic data reveal a characteristic pattern with NW-SE trending elongated magnetic anom- alies to the south of Sør Rondane. This area is interpreted as the eastward continuation of the distinct SE DML Province and therefore of the TOAST. Major curvilinear magnetic anomalies of several hundreds of kilometers length dissect the region south and southwest of Sør Rondane. These may represent boundaries of individual oce- anic arc terrane or alternatively major Pan-African shear zones. A significant change of the magnetic anomaly pat- tern ca. 800 km inland of Sør Rondane may indicate the southern minimum extent of the TOAST. Magnetic anomalies of varying size, amplitude, and orientation suggest a complex transitional area between the Belgica and Yamato Mts., which appears to separate the TOAST from an Indo-Antarctic craton to the east. The new data suggest that the TOAST is comparable in size with the Antarctic Peninsula and therefore represents a signif- icant piece of Neoproterozoic

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
EPIC3Gondwana Research, ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV, 59, pp. 97-107, ISSN: 1342-937X
Notes :
application/pdf
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1046056596
Document Type :
Electronic Resource