ABSTRACT
A detailed survey of the Oceanographer transform fault and environs
at 35º N, 35ºW has yielded detailed information with respect
to the generation and evolution of seafloor at a slowly accreting plate
margin. From this data detailed bathymetric maps and maps of depth to basement
have been constructed for a swath of seafloor 1800 km long and 100-200
km wide centered about the offset region. This data was used to subdivide
major phases of seafloor spreading during the Tertiary. The ridge crest
and all major topographic features near the transform appear to be affected
by their proximity to the transform. The ridge crest widens and deepens
towards the transform, and the rift valley walls are higher when they lie
on the transform side of the valley than when they lie on the fracture
zone side of the rift. Based upon the observed topographic effects the
physical properties of the crust and upper mantle must vary markedly near
the transform.
Constraints provided by a combined ALVIN/ANGUS field program in the
summer of 1980 indicate that the present zone of decoupling between the
North American and African plates is located in the center of the transform
valley; the zone of decoupling is less than 2 km wide, and is defined most
often by discontinuous, variable degraded elongate fault or slump-degraded
fualt scarps in sediment.-Vertical tectonism and mass-wasting processes
dominate near the axial deep whereas deposition and erosion dominate in
the terraces and the upper wall province. The petrologic data and the rock
distribution data confirm that the crust near the Oceanographer transform
is thin and even, perhaps discontinuous and indicates that the mode of
crustal formation is likely to change significantly near transforms. Spectacular
bedforms including abyssal furrows, dunes, longitudinal and transverse
current ripples, and wave ripples are abundant. Except for the furrows
these bedforms are concentrated in the very rugged, upper wall province
of the transform.
Chapter 3 presents a model for the formation of transform topography.
This model hinges upon the assumption of a curved zone of decoupling between
the plates near each ridge-transform intersection. This curvature gives
rise to a geometric peculiarity which requires a gap to open between the
plates. This gap conceivably should alter significantly many of the physical
properties of the transform such as its depth, the height of the crestal
mountains, the presence and width of any transverse ridges, and gradients
of the seafloor into the intersection deep. Many of these properties vary
in a fashion consistent with the model.
Moody, R.H., 1982. The geology of the Oceanographer Transform Fault.
Unpublished MSc. thesis, State University of New York at Albany. 163 pp.,
+x.
University at Albany Science Library call number: SCIENCE Oversize
(*) QE 40 Z899 1982 M66
Return to MS Theses completed in the Geological
Sciences Program, University at Albany