Evolution, pattern, and partitioning of deformation during oblique continental rifting: Inferences from lithospheric‐scale centrifuge models
2009
Oblique rifting is investigated through centrifuge experiments that reproduce extension of a continental lithosphere containing a preexisting weakness zone. During extension, this weakness localizes deformation, and different rift obliquity is obtained by varying its trend with respect to the stretching direction. Model results show that deformation is mostly controlled by the obliquity angle a (defined as the angle between the orthogonal to the rift trend and the extension direction). For low obliquity (alpha 45 degrees), no boundary faults form, and the extensional deformation affects the rift depression since early stages of extension. Dominance of the strike-slip motion over extension leads to the development of oblique-slip and nearly pure strike-slip faults, oblique to both the rift trend and the orthogonal to the extension direction, with no strain partitioning between the margins and the rift floor. These results suggest that oblique reactivation of preexisting weaknesses plays a major role in controlling rift evolution, architecture, and strain partitioning, findings that have a significant relevance for natural oblique rifts.
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