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Morris, Antony; Gee, Jeff S; Pressling, Nicola; John, Barbara E; MacLeod, Christopher J; Grimes, Craig B; Searle, R C (2009): (Table 1) Paleomagnetic of reoriented core pieces of IODP Hole 304-U1309D [dataset]. PANGAEA, https://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.789159, Supplement to: Morris, A et al. (2009): Footwall rotation in an oceanic core complex quantified using reoriented Integrated Ocean Drilling Program core samples. Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 287(1-2), 217-228, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.epsl.2009.08.007

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Abstract:
Oceanic core complexes expose lower crustal and upper mantle rocks on the seafloor by tectonic unroofing in the footwalls of large-slip detachment faults. The common occurrence of these structures in slow and ultra-slow spread oceanic crust suggests that they accommodate a significant component of plate divergence. However, the subsurface geometry of detachment faults in oceanic core complexes remains unclear. Competing models involve either: (a) displacement on planar, low-angle faults with little tectonic rotation; or (b) progressive shallowing by rotation of initially steeply dipping faults as a result of flexural unloading (the "rolling-hinge" model). We address this debate using palaeomagnetic remanences as markers for tectonic rotation within a unique 1.4 km long footwall section of gabbroic rocks recovered by Integrated Ocean Drilling Program (IODP) sampling at Atlantis Massif oceanic core complex on the Mid-Atlantic Ridge (MAR). These rocks contain a complex record of multipolarity magnetizations that are unrelated to alteration and igneous stratigraphy in the sampled section and are inferred to result from progressive cooling of the footwall section over geomagnetic polarity chrons C1r.2r, C1r.1n (Jaramillo) and C1r.1r. For the first time we have independently reoriented drill-core samples of lower crustal gabbros, that were initially azimuthally unconstrained, to a true geographic reference frame by correlating structures in individual core pieces with those identified from oriented imagery of the borehole wall. This allows reorientation of the palaeomagnetic data, placing far more rigorous constraints on the tectonic history than those possible using only palaeomagnetic inclination data. Analysis of the reoriented high temperature reversed component of magnetization indicates a 46° ± 6° anticlockwise rotation of the footwall around a MAR-parallel horizontal axis trending 011° ± 6°. Reoriented lower temperature components of normal and reversed polarity suggest that much of this rotation occurred after the end of the Jaramillo chron (0.99 Ma). The data provide unequivocal confirmation of the key prediction of flexural, rolling-hinge models for oceanic core complexes, whereby oceanic detachment faults initiate at higher dips and rotate to their present day low-angle geometries as displacement increases.
Coverage:
Latitude: 30.168650 * Longitude: -42.119000
Minimum DEPTH, sediment/rock: 98.94 m * Maximum DEPTH, sediment/rock: 379.93 m
Event(s):
304-U1309D * Latitude: 30.168650 * Longitude: -42.119000 * Elevation: -1644.9 m * Recovery: 243.69 m * Campaign: Exp304 (Oceanic Core Complex Formation, Atlantis Massive 1) * Basis: Joides Resolution * Method/Device: Drilling/drill rig (DRILL) * Comment: 77 cores; 380.7 m cored; 64 % recovered; 20.5 m drilled; 401.3 m penetrated
Parameter(s):
#NameShort NameUnitPrincipal InvestigatorMethod/DeviceComment
1Sample code/labelSample labelMorris, Antony
2DEPTH, sediment/rockDepth sedmGeocode
3AngleAngledegMorris, Antonyreorientation
4NRM, DeclinationDecl (NRM)degMorris, AntonyIODP core ref frame
5NRM, DeclinationDecl (NRM)degMorris, Antonyreoriented (geographic coordinates)
6NRM, InclinationIncl (NRM)degMorris, Antony
7Number of pointsPoints#Morris, Antonysamples included in mean direction
8Maximum angular deviationMADdegMorris, Antony
9CommentCommentMorris, Antony
Size:
800 data points

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