Staff directory
Damien Delvaux de Fenffe
Earth Sciences
Geodynamics and mineral resources
Geodynamics and mineral resources
Publication details
Delvaux, D. 2010. ‘African Stress Pattern from formal inversion of focal mechanism data. Implications for rifting dynamics’. Heidbach, O., Tingay, M., Wenzel, F. (eds), Tectonophysics 482, special issue : Frontiers in Stress Research : 105-128. Elsevier. DOI: 10.1016/j.tecto.2009.05.006. URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.tecto.2009.05.009 I.F. 1.677.
Article in a scientific Journal / Article in a Journal
The kinematic models and the associated orientation of extensional stress of the East African Rift System have been subjected to much debate since a long time. In the past decades, the proposed models relied on the interpretation of the overall rift geometry, geological fault-slip data and the few focal mechanisms available. These models generally suffer of a poor time control and an underestimation of the possible changes in the stress field and geodynamic regime with time and space. In the recent years, there has been a significant increase in the number of focal mechanisms available for the entire rift system, and it is now possible to estimate the present-day stress field in relative detail based on seismotectonic data alone. We compile 347 focal mechanism data from the Global/Harvard CMT catalogue and various other sources and grouped 332 of them in 24 distinct regions (boxes) on the basis of their geographical proximity, kinematic homogeneity and tectonic setting. For each box and for the same data set, reduced stress tensors have been obtained by formal stress inversion using both the TENSOR program (Delvaux & Sperner, 2003) and the SLICK method (Michael, 1984/1987). Both inversion methods show in comparable results in terms of horizontal stress axes orientations and tectonic stress regimes, which stem for the robustness of the approach. The obtained stress pattern reflects a complex interaction between 1st order effects as different driving forces, including plate boundary forces, and 2nd and 3rd order effects as gravitational potential of topography, intralithospheric processes, and the influence of structural heterogeneities of the rift structures. The evidence present in the stress orientations of the 2nd and 3rd order stress pattern as the variations in the horizontal stress axes along the axis of the rift are of particular interest as they were not yet captured or shown in earlier numerical models of the stress field. Additional sources of tectonic forces in supplement to the gravitational potential energy forces as considered in the earlier models are necessary to explain the observed patterns.
- Geodynamic processes, erosion and sedimentation for the last 30.000 years in the Tanganyika-Rukwa-Malawi Rift area, Western Tanzania
- Kinematic constraints on mantle-lithosphere interactions
- Development of Win-Tensor program for paleostress reconstruction in brittle structural analysis
- Discontinuities and tectono-sedimentary events in the Cuvette centrale and surrounding basins in D.R. Congo
- Kinematics of the East African Rift around the Mbeya triple junction