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Davison, I. 2007. Tectonics of the Brazilian Atlantic margin Salt Basins. In: Reis, A., Butler, R.W.H., and Graham, R.H. (ed.). Deformation of the Continental Crust: The Legacy of Mike Coward, Special Publication Geological Society London, 272, 345-359
Abstract
The South Atlantic salt province is a series
of basins separated by basement highs and lows, later volcanic
highs and sub-aerial ocean spreading ridges. The Brazilian salt
basins (Santos-Campos-Espírito
Santo, South Bahia (Cumuruxatiba, Jequitinhonha and Camamu), Sergipe-Alagoas
and Ceará) are separated from the African salt basins of
Angola-Congo-Gabon, Rio Muni and Doula.
The base salt horizon is offset by faults with
up to 2 km of displacement in the Santos and Campos basins and
the salt is thicker on the downthrown side of the faults. Fault
scarps also controlled the thickness of the underlying ‘sag'
phase of sedimentation. Downslope sliding movement of overlying
Albian strata occurred soon after salt deposition and listric
faults developed which sole out in the salt horizon.
Sediment loading in the Santos Basin produced
a landward-dipping base salt which has promoted development of
counter-regional faults and enhanced later contractional effects
due to either downslope sliding or regional tectonic compression.
The narrow salt basins of South Bahia have a steeply-dipping
base salt horizon (4°),
and pronounced folding which begins at the oceanward pinch-out
of the salt and propagates back up the slope. The topographic highs
above the fold anticlines are rapidly eroded on narrow margins,
which allows the folds to grow more easily to large amplitudes
at the top salt horizon.
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