Aden–Owen–Carlsberg triple junction
The Aden–Owen–Carlsberg triple junction (AOC), also known as the Arabia–India–Somalia triple junction, is a triple junction that connects the Aden Ridge, Owen Fracture Zone, and Carlsberg Ridge in the northwest Indian Ocean. It has been described as one of only three RRF (ridge–ridge–fault) triple junctions on Earth, besides the Azores triple junction and Chile triple junction. However, because the fault arm of such unstable triple junctions tend to evolve into a spreading centre, all three cases have quickly evolved into stable RRR triple junctions.[1]
Since a reorganisation of the involved tectonic plates c. 10 Ma, the AOC moves in discrete steps westward along the Aden Ridge. West of the southern termination of the Owen fracture Zone, the Beautemps-Beaupré Basin, a new plate boundary develops and the basin will be transferred from the Arabian plate to the Indian plate in a near future.[2]
The Carlsberg Ridge was opened between the Seychelles and India in the early Tertiary and has since undergone three stages of spreading. A first, fast stage 61 to 51 Ma with a 6 cm/year (2.4 in/year) half-rate spreading; a second 39 to 23 Ma ultra-slow (0.6 cm/year (0.24 in/year)) stage during the India-Eurasia collision; followed by the present slow (1.2 cm/year (0.47 in/year)) spreading which reaches 2.2 ± 0.1 cm/year (0.866 ± 0.039 in/year) in its northern end. This latest stage was initiated by the opening of the Gulf of Aden during which the Aden Ridge began to quickly propagate westward at a rate of 200 km (120 mi)/Ma.[3]
The Owen Fracture Zone, together with the Dalrymple Trough in its northern end, is a transform fault along which spreading between the Arabian and Indian plates at the Carlsberg Ridge becomes the subduction of the Himalayan orogeny. The Owen Fracture Zone passes east of the Owen Ridge which was uplifted during the opening of the eastern Gulf of Aden in the Early Miocene. North of the Aden-Owen-Carlsberg Triple Junction the Owen Fracture Zone is quiet for 250 km (160 mi) but right-lateral slip along its active segments indicates that Arabia is moving northward faster than India.[3]
The relative motion between the Nubian and Somalian plates before 3.2 Ma is difficult to determine since the movement in the Southwest Indian Ridge is extremely slow. Analysing the Aden–Owen–Carlsberg triple junction, however, geologists have been able to determine that before 11 Ma the Nubia–Somalia relative motion was faster than today and contained a significant strike-slip component.[4]
References
editNotes
edit- ^ Fournier et al. 2008, Fig. 1, p. 576; Conclusions, pp. 586–587
- ^ Fournier et al. 2010, Fig. 7, p. 10
- ^ a b Fournier et al. 2008, Geodynamic setting of the AOC triple junction, pp. 576–578
- ^ Iaffaldano, Hawkins & Sambridge 2014, Abstract
Sources
edit- Fournier, M.; Chamot-Rooke, N.; Petit, C.; Huchon, P.; Al-Kathiri, A.; Audin, L.; Beslier, M.-O.; d'Acremont, E.; Fabbri, O.; Fleury, J.-M.; Khanbari, K.; Lepvrier, C.; Leroy, S.; Maillot, B.; Merkouriev, S. (2010). "Arabia-Somalia plate kinematics, evolution of the Aden-Owen-Carlsberg triple junction, and opening of the Gulf of Aden" (PDF). Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth. 115 (B4). doi:10.1029/2008JB006257.
- Fournier, M.; Petit, C.; Chamot-Rooke, N.; Fabbri, O.; Huchon, P.; Maillot, B.; Lepvrier, C. (2008). "Do ridge–ridge–fault triple junctions exist on Earth? Evidence from the Aden–Owen–Carlsberg junction in the NW Indian Ocean". Basin Research. 20 (4): 575–590. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.701.7495. doi:10.1111/j.1365-2117.2008.00356.x.
- Iaffaldano, G.; Hawkins, R.; Sambridge, M. (2014). "Bayesian noise-reduction in Arabia/Somalia and Nubia/Arabia finite rotations since ~20 Ma: Implications for Nubia/Somalia relative motion". Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems. 15 (4): 845–854. doi:10.1002/2013GC005089. hdl:1885/70787.