The role of pre-magmatic rifting in shaping a volcanic continental
margin: An example from the Eastern North American Margin
Abstract
Both magmatic and tectonic processes contribute to the formation of
volcanic continental margins. Such margins are thought to undergo
extension across a narrow zone of lithospheric thinning
(~100 km). New observations based on existing and
reprocessed data from the Eastern North American Margin contradict this
hypothesis. With ~64,000 km of 2D seismic data tied to
40 wells combined with published refraction, deep reflection, receiver
function and onshore drilling efforts, we quantified along-strike
variations in the distribution of rift structures, magmatism, crustal
thickness, and early post-rift sedimentation under the shelf of
Baltimore Canyon trough (BCT), Long Island Platform and Georges Bank
Basin (GBB). Results indicate that BCT is narrow (80-120 km) with a
sharp basement hinge and few rift basins. The Seaward Dipping Reflectors
(SDR) there extend ~50 km seaward of the hinge line. In
contrast, the GBB is 30 wide (~200 km), has many
syn-rift structures, and the SDR there extend ~ 200 km
seaward of the hinge line. Early post-rift depocenters at the GBB
coincide with thinner crust suggesting “uniform” thinning of the
entire lithosphere. Models for the formation of volcanic margins do not
explain the wide structure of the GBB. We argue that crustal thinning of
the BCT was closely associated with late-syn rift magmatism whereas the
broad thinning of the GBB segment predated magmatism. Correlation of
these variations to crustal terranes of different compositions suggests
that the inherited rheology determined the pre-magmatic response of the
lithosphere to extension.