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  • structural map  (2)
  • dikes  (1)
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  • 1
    Keywords: accretion mechanism ; oceanic ridge ; ophiolite ; structural map ; Oman
    In: Marine geophysical research, Dordrecht : Springer, 1970, 21(2000), Seite 147-179, 0025-3235
    In: volume:21
    In: year:2000
    In: pages:147-179
    Type of Medium: Article
    Pages: Ill., graph. Darst , 3 Kt.
    ISSN: 0025-3235
    Series Statement: The ophiolite of Oman and United Arab States / ed.: Françoise Boudier
    Language: English
    Note: Marine geophysical researches
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  • 2
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Marine geophysical researches 21 (2000), S. 147-180 
    ISSN: 1573-0581
    Keywords: accretion mechanism ; oceanic ridge ; oman ; ophiolite ; structural map
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Geosciences , Physics
    Notes: Abstract This study is altogether an extended legend for the folded maps incorporated in this volume, a review of the current knowledge on the Oman-United Arab Emirates ophiolite belt, and a new synthesis at the scale of the entire belt. Following a brief description of the petrological and structural units composing the ophiolite, the content of the three structural maps (planar structures, linear structures and dikes) is presented. Next, we discuss the various constraints introduced by these data in view of a synthesis of the ophiolite belt in terms of an ocean floor spreading system. Because they are the link between the factual results summarised in the maps, and the ridge models, these constraints are critical (and are central to the structural analysis of ophiolites). They introduce severe limits to possible ridge models such as those proposed in the conclusion. After being reassembled in a best geometrical and structural fit, the belt is parted into three domains (Figure 1). The south-eastern and central domains (from Wadi Tayin to Haylayn and possibly Sarami massifs) incorporate a 40–50 km-wide and possibly over 200 km long new ridge segment, oriented NW–SE, which is opening into a 1–2 My older lithosphere oriented NE–SW. The northern domain (from Khawr Fakkan to Hilti massifs) is well explained by a model of propagating (Aswad) and failing (Fizh) ridge segments of nearly parallel NNW-SSE orientation which are separated by a 10–20 km-wide transform zone covering the north of Fizh massif. This new synthesis integrates and updates the local syntheses published so far. It illustrates again the contrast between locally simple ridge segments organised around mantle diapirs and the tectonic complexity of the two larger domains, with, as an example, sheared mantle, vertical Moho and dismembered lower crust with hydrous contamination, near the tip of ridge propagators. The relation between the northern and central-southern domains is obscure because the paleomagnetic results suggest that, with respect to the central-southern domain, the northern domain should have rotated 130° clockwise. Such a large rotation of a 200 km long domain is difficult to explain, inasmuch as the age constraints seem to restrict the possible duration of the rotation to a couple of Myr. The preferred model consists in a progressive clockwise rotation during tectonic accretion of increasingly larger blocks. This is initiated in the northern massifs, progressing over 1–2 Myr, southward to finally integrate the entire ophiolite.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 3
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Marine geophysical researches 21 (2000), S. 269-287 
    ISSN: 1573-0581
    Keywords: Oman ophiolite ; dikes ; mid-ocean ridges
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Geosciences , Physics
    Notes: Abstract Mafic dikes and dunite veins are observed in the mantle section of the Oman – United Arab Emirates (O-UAE) ophiolites, as well as diabase dikes and hydrothermal veins in the crust section. They have been systematically measured during the mapping of this ophiolite and are represented by their trajectories in the folded map 3 in the back of this volume, and by local stereoplots included in this study. Mafic dikes in the mantle section correspond to basaltic melt being injected at decreasing temperatures from above or at peridotite solidus, down to below 450 °C. Hydrothermal veins associated with dioritic dikes issued from hydrous melting of host gabbros are observed down to the base of the crust, bearing evidence for sea water penetration into basal gabbros at or above 900 °C, that is very close to the ridge axis. Dike orientations record the stress field at the time of their injection. In most places, all types of dikes are dominantly parallel to the general trend of the nearest sheeted dike complex; thus the stress field has not visibly changed from melt injection in the asthenosphere below the ridge of origin to injection in a lithosphere up to a few Myr old, at distances beyond 100 km from the axis. Local preferred orientations, when they are considered in the frame of the paleo-ridge system of O-UAE, result in a coherent model throughout the belt: the sheeted dike complex dips moderately away from the presumed ridge axis and the mantle dikes, toward this axis. These opposite directions are explained by the presumed effect of subsidence toward the axis for the sheeted dikes and by the central feeding from an asthenospheric uprise for the mantle dikes.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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