TY - CHAP
T1 - The Atlantic Jigsaw Puzzle and the geoheritage of Angola
AU - Jacobs, Louis L.
AU - Schröder, Stefan
AU - de Sousa, Nair
AU - Dixon, Richard
AU - Fiordalisi, Edoardo
AU - Maréchal, Arthur
AU - Mateus, Octávio
AU - Claude Nsungani, Pedro
AU - Polcyn, Michael J.
AU - do Couto Ramos Pereira, Gustavo
AU - Rochelle-Bates, Nathan
AU - Schulp, Anne
AU - Scotese, Christopher
AU - Sharp, Ian
AU - Gaudari Silvano, Carlos
AU - Swart, Roger
AU - Vineyard, Diana
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 The Author(s).
PY - 2024
Y1 - 2024
N2 - The jigsaw-puzzle fit of South America and Africa is an icon of plate tectonics and continental drift. Fieldwork in Angola since 2002 allows the correlation of onshore outcrops and offshore geophysical and wellcore data in the context of rift, sag, salt, and post-salt drift phases of the opening of the central South Atlantic. These outcrops, ranging in age from >130 Ma to <71 Ma, record Early Cretaceous outpouring of the Etendeka–Paraná Large Igneous Province (Bero Volcanic Complex) and rifting, followed by continental carbonate and siliciclastic deposition (Tumbalunda Formation) during the sagging of the nascent central South Atlantic basin. By the Aptian, evaporation of sea water resulted in thick salt deposits (Bambata Formation), terminated by seafloor spreading. The Equatorial Atlantic Gateway began opening by the early Late Cretaceous (100 Ma) and allowed flow of currents between the North and South Atlantic, creating environmental conditions that heralded the introduction of marine reptiles. These dramatic outcrops are a unique element of geoheritage because they arguably comprise the most complete terrestrially exposed geological record of the puzzle-like icon of continental drift.
AB - The jigsaw-puzzle fit of South America and Africa is an icon of plate tectonics and continental drift. Fieldwork in Angola since 2002 allows the correlation of onshore outcrops and offshore geophysical and wellcore data in the context of rift, sag, salt, and post-salt drift phases of the opening of the central South Atlantic. These outcrops, ranging in age from >130 Ma to <71 Ma, record Early Cretaceous outpouring of the Etendeka–Paraná Large Igneous Province (Bero Volcanic Complex) and rifting, followed by continental carbonate and siliciclastic deposition (Tumbalunda Formation) during the sagging of the nascent central South Atlantic basin. By the Aptian, evaporation of sea water resulted in thick salt deposits (Bambata Formation), terminated by seafloor spreading. The Equatorial Atlantic Gateway began opening by the early Late Cretaceous (100 Ma) and allowed flow of currents between the North and South Atlantic, creating environmental conditions that heralded the introduction of marine reptiles. These dramatic outcrops are a unique element of geoheritage because they arguably comprise the most complete terrestrially exposed geological record of the puzzle-like icon of continental drift.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85199291380&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1144/SP543-2022-301
DO - 10.1144/SP543-2022-301
M3 - Chapter
VL - 543
T3 - Geological Society Special Publication
SP - 395
EP - 408
BT - Geology’s Significant Sites and their Contributions to Geoheritage
A2 - Clary, R. M.
A2 - Pyle, E. J.
A2 - Andrews, W. M.
PB - Geological Society of London
CY - London
ER -