passive margin

passive margins

passive margins Continental margins, the linear zones that mark the position of the edge of continental crust, are classified as passive or active according to whether they are attached to adjacent oceanic crust, as part of the same plate, or detached from it across a plate boundary. Passive margins may be further subdivided according to their maturity, and whether or not they are protected by offshore island arcs. Extensive mature passive margins fringe the Atlantic Ocean, East Africa, India, Antarctica, and the western seaboard of Australia. The best example of an immature passive margin is the Red Sea, only 10 Ma old, an embryonic ocean. As well as providing the setting for much of the world's oil and gas, most of the developed and developing world is bordered by passive margins. Consequently, oil companies and national governments alike have invested considerably in understanding their development.

Mature passive margins develop during oceanic widening as part of a continuous cycle of ocean opening and widening, subsequent shrinking, continental collision (orogenesis), and continental splitting (rifting). Consequently, they display characteristic syn-rift and post-rift sedimentary successions related, respectively, to the transition from rifting and isostatic subsidence to the cessation of lithospheric extension and the onset of ‘passive’ thermal subsidence that accompanies the production of new oceanic crust.

Continental rifting commonly continues until the crust has been thinned to practically zero thickness, such that mantle rocks erupt at the surface to form new oceanic crust. Studies of present and former continental rift basins show that once the crust has been thinned to half of its normal 35 km thickness liberation of basaltic partial melts results in extrusive volcanism. Volcanic rocks of Middle Jurassic age mark the point in time in which the North Sea crust was thinned beyond this critical limit. However, further rifting ceased soon after this episode of volcanism, and the basin did not develop into a fully fledged ocean basin.

The onset of ocean opening is signified by two major changes: the cessation of extensional faulting, and the thermal relaxation of thinned, and therefore hot, lithosphere. These changes mark the onset of post-rift deposition. The base of the post-rift sequence is usually defined by a marked, end-rift unconformity, recording the depositional hiatus accompanying the thermal subsidence of a formerly uplifted region of net erosion and non-deposition. Interpretation of boreholes drilled into passive margins reveals a distinct transition from generally land-based syn-rift sedimentation to deepening marine environments of deposition during the post-rift phase. Thermally subsiding basins are always considerably larger than the area of their precedent rift basin. Marine flooding of the end rift unconformity, and the deepening of the post-rift marine environment, reflects the areal extent and prolonged nature of thermal subsidence (Fig. 1). Using borehole data, particularly from the eastern United States shelf, modelling of the subsidence history of passive margins has revealed that initial thermal subsidence occurs typically at a rate of 30 m per million years, subsequently decaying exponentially until it stabilizes some 150 Ma later.

Jonathan P. Turner

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PAUL HANCOCK and BRIAN J. SKINNER. "passive margins." The Oxford Companion to the Earth. 2000. Retrieved June 01, 2012 from Encyclopedia.com: http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1O112-passivemargins.html

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passive margin

passive margin (trailing edge) A continental margin which is not also a plate margin. Such margins are also known as ‘aseismic margins’ or ‘Atlantic-type margins’ and are contrasted with active margins. Passive margins are characterized by rifted and rotated blocks of usually thick sedimentary sequences. These rocks are often highly prospective for oil and gas, with a variety of traps, including those related to the diapiric (see DIAPIRISM) rise of the rock salt formed during the initial separation of the continents.

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AILSA ALLABY and MICHAEL ALLABY. "passive margin." A Dictionary of Earth Sciences. 1999. Encyclopedia.com. 1 Jun. 2012 <http://www.encyclopedia.com>.

AILSA ALLABY and MICHAEL ALLABY. "passive margin." A Dictionary of Earth Sciences. 1999. Encyclopedia.com. (June 1, 2012). http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1O13-passivemargin.html

AILSA ALLABY and MICHAEL ALLABY. "passive margin." A Dictionary of Earth Sciences. 1999. Retrieved June 01, 2012 from Encyclopedia.com: http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1O13-passivemargin.html

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