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Cretaceous and Tertiary extension throughout the Ross Sea, Antarctica

January 1, 2007

Marine geophysical data from the deep sea adjacent to the Ross Sea, Antarctica suggest that 70 km of
extension occurred between East and West Antarctica from 46 to 2 Ma. The Northern and Victoria Land Basins in the
western Ross Sea adjacent to the Transantarctic Mountains accommodated 95 km of this extension. Several kilometers
of Oligocene sediments are found in the Central Trough and Eastern Basin in the eastern Ross Sea. Subsidence
modeling accounts for these accumulations with about 40 km of extension in each basin centered on 35 Ma; therefore
Ross Sea-wide Tertiary extension was comparable to extension in the deep-sea system. The early Tertiary geometry was
of one oceanic rift that branched into at least three rifts in the continental lithosphere. This pattern is likely due to the
contrast of physical properties and thermal state between the two different lithospheres at the continent-ocean boundary.

Publication Year 2007
Title Cretaceous and Tertiary extension throughout the Ross Sea, Antarctica
DOI 10.3133/ofr20071047SRP098
Authors Robert C. Decesari, Douglas C. Wilson, Bruce P. Luyendyk, Michael Faulkner
Publication Type Report
Publication Subtype USGS Numbered Series
Series Title Open-File Report
Series Number 2007-1047-SRP-098
Index ID ofr20071047SRP098
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
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