|

Abstract
for AAPG Paris International Meeting 2005
Ages and Tectonics of the South Atlantic Salt Basins
Ian
Davison Earthmoves and R. Wynn Jones BP Exploration
The South Atlantic salt province contains separate basins of differing
ages: Ceará, Sergipe-Alagoas, and south Bahia-Espírito
Santo-Campos-Santos in Brazil. and: the Doula, Rio Muni, and Gabon-Congo-Angola
Basin in Africa. The Ascension Fracture Zone may have separated Rio
Muni from the main African salt. The southern termination of the
main African basin is the deep Namibe Rift which never evaporated.
The Sergipe-Alagoas Basin is separated from Camamu by Jacuípe-
a sediment-starved hole that never dried up. African salt basins
were probably separated from Brazil by sub-aerial spreading ridges
exposed by evaporation drawdown.
Angolan salt was deposited ca. 123-124 Ma, as early Aptian algeriana–cabri zone
planktonic foraminifera occur above salt (DSDP well 364; undisclosed
shelfal well), and early Aptian spores, pollen and ostracods occur
below. Sergipe-Alagoas evaporites occurs in two intervals; Paripueira
Member deposited during zones P-230 (Inaperturopollenites
crisopolensis) to P-260 (Inaperturopollenites
turbatus); and the Ibura Member, restricted to upper
P-270 zone (Sergipea variverrucata). Top Paripuera
salt is older than 114.5 Ma, according to the Graciansky et al. (1998)
time-scale, and pre-dates the first appearance of Ticinella
bejaouaensis. The oldest Angolan salt is younger
than the Paripuera Member, as it post-dates the last appearance of Inaperturopollenites
crisopolensis. The Gabon evaporites are equivalent
to the Ibura Member. On the Florianopolis High(S. Brazil) Ariri Formation
anhydrite, equivalent of Santos salt lies on volcanics dated at 113.2
+ 0.1 Ma. It is still not clear whether the observed diachronism
is within, or between salt basins, or both.
|