Staff directory
Damien Delvaux de Fenffe
Earth Sciences
Geodynamics and mineral resources
Geodynamics and mineral resources
Publication details
Delvaux, D., Kongota Isasi, E., Ganza Bamulezi, G. & Everaerts, M. 2016. ‘Intraplate compressional deformation inWest-Congo and the Congo basin: related to ridge-puch from the South Atlantic spreading ridge?’. EGU General Assembly 2016, 18-22 April 2016, Vienna, Austria. Book of abstracts, geophysical research abstracts vol. 18. EGU2016-1598, 2016.
Conference abstract
After the break-up and separation of South America from Africa and the initiation of the South-Atlantic midoceanic
ridge in the Albian, at about 120 Ma, ridge-push forces started to build-up in the oceanic lithosphere and
were transmitted to the adjacent continental plates. This is particularly well expressed in the passive margin and
continental interior of Central Africa. According to the relations of Wiens and Stein (1985) between ridge-push
forces and basal drag in function of the lithospheric age of oceanic plates, the deviatoric stress reaches a
compressional maximum between 50 and 100, Ma after the initiation of the spreading ridge, so broadly corresponding
to the Paleocene in this case (70-20 Ma). Earthquake focal mechanism data show that the West-Congo
margin and a large part of the Congo basin are still currently under compressional stresses with an horizontal
compression parallel to the direction of the active transform fracture zones. We studied the fracture network
along the Congo River in Kinshasa and Brazzaville which affect Cambrian sandstones and probably also the late
Cretaceous-Paleocene sediments. Their brittle tectonic evolution is compatible with the buildup of ridge-push
forces related to the South-Atlantic opening. Further inland, low-angle reverse faults are found affecting Jurassic
to Middle Cretaceous cores from the Samba borehole in the Congo basin and strike-slip movements are recorded
as a second brittle phase in the Permian cores of the Dekese well, at the southern margin of the Congo basin. An
analysis of the topography and river network of the Congo basin show the development of low-amplitude (50-100
m) long wavelengths (100-300 km) undulations that can be interpreted as lithospheric buckling in response to the
compressional intraplate stress field generated by the Mid-Atlantic ridge-push.
Wiens, D.A., Stein, S., 1985. Implications of oceanic intraplate seismicity for plate stresses, driving forces
and theology. Tectonophysics 1166, 143-162.