Emmanuel Masini
University of Strasbourg
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Featured researches published by Emmanuel Masini.
Tectonics | 2014
Julie Tugend; Gianreto Manatschal; N. J. Kusznir; Emmanuel Masini; Geoffroy Mohn; I. Thinon
The Bay of Biscay and the Pyrenees correspond to a Lower Cretaceous rift system including both oceanic and hyperextended rift domains. The transition from preserved oceanic and rift domains in the West to their complete inversion in the East enables us to study the progressive reactivation of a hyperextended rift system. We use seismic interpretation, gravity inversion, and field mapping to identify and map former rift domains and their subsequent reactivation. We propose a new map and sections across the system illustrating the progressive integration of the rift domains into the orogen. This study aims to provide insights on the formation of hyperextended rift systems and discuss their role during reactivation. Two spatially and temporally distinct rift systems can be distinguished: the Bay of Biscay-Parentis and the Pyrenean-Basque-Cantabrian rifts. While the offshore Bay of Biscay represent a former mature oceanic domain, the fossil remnants of hyperextended domains preserved onshore in the Pyrenean-Cantabrian orogen record distributed extensional deformation partitioned between strongly segmented rift basins. Reactivation initiated in the exhumed mantle domain before it affected the hyperthinned domain. Both domains accommodated most of the shortening. The final architecture of the orogen is acquired once the conjugate necking domains became involved in collisional processes. The complex 3-D architecture of the initial rift system may partly explain the heterogeneous reactivation of the overall system. These results have important implications for the formation and reactivation of hyperextended rift systems and for the restoration of the Bay of Biscay and Pyrenean domains
Tectonics | 2014
Frédéric Mouthereau; Pierre-Yves Filleaudeau; Arnaud Vacherat; Raphaël Pik; Olivier Lacombe; Maria Giuditta Fellin; Sébastien Castelltort; Frédéric Christophoul; Emmanuel Masini
Estimating shortening in collision belts is critical to reconstruct past plate motions. Balanced cross-section techniques are efficient in external domains but lack resolution in the hinterland. The role and the original extent of the continental margins during the earliest stages of continental convergence are debated. Here we combine existing and new sequentially restored cross sections in the central Pyrenees, with Iberia/Europe (IB/EU) plate kinematic reconstructions and new apatite fission track, zircon (U-Th)/He, and U/Pb ages to discuss higher and lower bounds of crustal shortening and determine the amount of distal margin sutured during collision. We show that after extension in the Albian (~110 Ma), a 50 km wide extremely thinned crustal domain underwent subduction at 83 Ma. Low-temperature data and thermal modeling show that synorogenic cooling started at 75–70 Ma. This date marks the transition from suturing of the highly extended margin to collision of the more proximal margin and orogenic growth. We infer a relatively low crustal shortening of 90 km (30%) that reflects the dominant thick-skinned tectonic style of shortening in the Pyrenees, as expected for young (Mesozoic) and weak lithospheres. Our proposed reconstruction agrees with IB/EU kinematic models that consider initially rapid convergence of Iberia, reducing from circa 70 Ma onward. This study suggests that plate reconstructions are consistent with balanced cross sections if shortening predicted by age-dependent properties of the continental lithosphere is taken into account.
International Journal of Earth Sciences | 2014
Emmanuel Masini; Gianreto Manatschal; Julie Tugend; Geoffroy Mohn; Jean-Marie Flament
In this paper, we present a sedimentary and structural analysis that together with maps, sections and new Ar/Ar data enable to describe the tectono-sedimentary evolution of the Mauléon hyper-extended rift basin exposed in the W-Pyrenees. Hyper-extension processes that ultimately resulted in exhuming mantle rocks are the result of the subsequent development of two diachronous detachment systems related to two evolutional stages of rifting. An initial Late Aptian Early Albian crustal thinning phase is first recorded by the development of a crustal necking zone controlled by the north-vergent Southern Mauléon Detachment system. During a subsequent exhumation phase, active faulting migrates to the north with the emplacement of the Northern Mauléon detachment system that exhumed north section thinned continental crust and mantle rocks. This diachronous crustal thinning and exhumation processes are also recorded by the diachronous deposition of syn-tectonic sedimentary tracts above the two supra-detachment sub-basins. Syn-tectonic sedimentary tracts record the progressive exhumation of footwall rocks along detachment systems. Tectonic migration from the southern to the northern Mauléon Detachment system is recorded by the coeval deposition of “sag” deposits above the necking zone basin and of syn-tectonic tracts above exhumed rocks north section. Located on a hanging-wall situation related to the Mauléon hyper-extension structures, the Arzacq Basin also records a major crustal thinning phase as shown by its subsidence evolution so as by deep seismic images. The absence of major top-basement structures and its overall sag morphology suggest that crustal thinning processes occurred by decoupled extension of lower crustal levels contrasting with the Southern Mauléon Detachment system. Reconciling observations from the Mauléon and Arzacq Basins, we finally propose in this paper that they were the result of one and the same asymmetric crustal thinning and exhumation processes, where extension is accommodated into the upper crust in the Mauléon Basin (lower plate basin) and relayed in ductile lower crust below the Arzacq Basin (upper plate basin).
Geological Society of America Bulletin | 2012
Emmanuel Masini; Gianreto Manatschal; Geoffroy Mohn; Patrick Unternehr
The discovery of hyperextended crust in present-day magma-poor distal rifted margins has major implications for the development of rift concepts. Indeed, the occurrence of low-angle detachment faulting changes the structural style and modifies the classical architecture of rifted margins, often represented by tilted blocks and bounded by high-angle normal faults. At present, little is known about the ways in which detachment systems form in distal margins through time and space and the way in which they control the formation of supradetachment rift basins. In this paper, we discuss a Jurassic rift-related detachment system of the fossil Adriatic distal rifted margin, today exposed in the Lower Austroalpine Err nappe in SE Switzerland. A palinspastic restoration of the Alpine units places the three-dimensional postrift architecture of this detachment system over more than 200 km 2 and 34 km in transport direction. Based on the description of a preserved supradetachment basin, we can show that the synrift sedimentary evolution records the formation of supradetachment extensional allochthons and the exhumation of basement rocks. Using this well-exposed example, we will show that detachment systems are intimately related to the overall tectono-sedimentary evolution of the most distal parts of the Adriatic rifted margin and possibly other Atlantic-type magma-poor hyperextended rifted margins.
Geological Society, London, Special Publications | 2017
Gwenn Péron-Pinvidic; Gianreto Manatschal; Emmanuel Masini; Emilie Sutra; Jean Marie Flament; Isabelle Haupert; Patrick Unternehr
Abstract We summarize here observations from the South Atlantic Angola–Gabon rifted margin. Our study was based on the interpretation of a selection of deep penetration depth-migrated seismic reflection profiles. We describe here the large-scale dip architecture of the margin under five structural domains (proximal, necking, distal, outer and oceanic) and list their characteristics. We investigated the necking domain further and discuss the architecture of the distal domain as a combination of hyper-extended crust and possible exhumed mantle. The mapping and characterization of these domains, at the margin-scale, allow us to illustrate the along-strike structural and stratigraphic variability of the margin. We interpret this variability as the result of a shift from an upper plate setting to a lower plate setting. This shift is either sharp, typified by a major regional normal fault on the northern flank of a residual hanging-wall block, identified offshore Cabinda–Zaire, or more diffuse to the south. First-order screening of conjugate profiles confirmed the segmentation and structural characteristics of the transfer zones. The dataset studied also allowed the identification of key sections that can be considered as type examples of upper plate and lower plate margins and which allow us to discuss the characteristics of these end-member settings.
Geological Society, London, Special Publications | 2015
Julie Tugend; Gianreto Manatschal; N. J. Kusznir; Emmanuel Masini
Abstract We use the Bay of Biscay and Western Pyrenees as a natural laboratory to develop and apply an approach to characterize and identify distinctive rifted margin domains in offshore and onshore settings. The Bay of Biscay and Western Pyrenees offer access to seismically imaged, drilled and exposed parts of one and the same hyperextended rift system. Offshore, we use gravity inversion and flexural backstripping techniques combined with seismic interpretation to provide estimates of accommodation space, crustal thickness and lithosphere thinning. Onshore, we focus on key outcrops of the former rift domain to describe the nature of sediment and basement rocks, and of their interface. This qualitative and quantitative characterization provides diagnostic elements for the identification of five distinct structural domains at magma-poor rifted margins and their fossil analogues (proximal, necking, hyperthinned, exhumed mantle and oceanic domains). This new approach can be used to reconcile offshore and onshore observations, and to aid interpretation when only local observations are available. Onshore remnants can be placed in an offshore rifted-margin context, enabling the prediction of first-order crustal architecture. For the interpretation of offshore seismic reflection sections, geological insights into rift structures and basement nature can be suggested based on onshore analogies. Supplementary material: Sensitivity of backstripping results to flexural rigidity is available at http://www.geolsoc.org.uk/SUP18778.
Scientific Reports | 2018
Sébastien Chevrot; Matthieu Sylvander; Julien Diaz; Roland Martin; Frédéric Mouthereau; Gianreto Manatschal; Emmanuel Masini; Sylvain Calassou; Franck Grimaud; Hélène Pauchet; Mario R. Fernandez
We exploit the data from five seismic transects deployed across the Pyrenees to characterize the deep architecture of this collisional orogen. We map the main seismic interfaces beneath each transect by depth migration of P-to-S converted phases. The migrated sections, combined with the results of recent tomographic studies and with maps of Bouguer and isostatic anomalies, provide a coherent crustal-scale picture of the belt. In the Western Pyrenees, beneath the North Pyrenean Zone, a continuous band of high density/velocity material is found at a very shallow level (~10 km) beneath the Mauleon basin and near Saint-Gaudens. In the Western Pyrenees, we also find evidence for northward continental subduction of Iberian crust, down to 50–70 km depth. In the Eastern Pyrenees, these main structural features are not observed. The boundary between these two domains is near longitude 1.3 °E, where geological field studies document a major change in the structure of the Cretaceous rift system, and possibly a shift of its polarity, suggesting that the deep orogenic architecture of the Pyrenees is largely controlled by structural inheritance.
Tectonics | 2009
Suzon Jammes; Gianreto Manatschal; Luc L. Lavier; Emmanuel Masini
Tectonics | 2012
Geoffroy Mohn; Gianreto Manatschal; Marco Beltrando; Emmanuel Masini; N. J. Kusznir
International Journal of Earth Sciences | 2010
Geoffroy Mohn; Gianreto Manatschal; Othmar Müntener; Marco Beltrando; Emmanuel Masini