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Eastern margin of the Red Sea and the coastal structures in Saudi Arabia

September 26, 1970

Results of many investigations since 1950 show that the eastern margin of the Red Sea and associated coastal structures in Saudi Arabia have a long geologic history, starting with the deposition of Precambrian eugeosynclinal sedimentary and volcanic rocks before 1000 Ma ago and extending to recent geologic time. The northeastern flank of the Red Sea rift valley is in a shield area affected by possibly four plutonic events at 1000, 720 to 735 (?), 660 to 670, and about 570 Ma. Cratonization of the shield occurred during all or part of the span 520 to 590 Ma. Nubian-type sandstone of Cambrian and Ordovician age laps up on the shield from Jordan southeastward around the rim of the Great Nafud basin, and along the eastern edge of the shield southeastward to 45 degrees E longitude where it is overlapped by Permian limestone. The sandstone reappears to the south and extends southward and westward to the Asir Mountains at the Yemen border. Isolated sandstone outliers are present in the central shield, proving that lower Paleozoic sandstone covered most, if not all, of the basement as now exposed. The Mesozoic era was almost entirely a time of uplift and non-deposition except a middle to late Jurassic fringe marine invasion in the south and a possible narrow invasion from the Gulf of Suez at the end of the era. Marine and non-marine sedimentary deposits of middle and late Tertiary age are found along the Red Sea coast, and Oligocene basaltic flows are present at both low and high altitudes in the coastal ranges. Evidence for important volcanism during Oligocene and earliest Miocene time is widespread, and within the eastern rift fault zone early Miocene hypabyssal intrusives cut the shear zones. Major rifting occurred just before or during early Miocene when the flanks of the rift valley were ramped upward. Shortly after this volcanism a thickness on the order of 3500 m of middle Miocene marl and evaporite beds filled the Red Sea trough. Evidence also exists for widespread subaerial erosion in the Pliocene. Younger lava flows are Pliocene in age but the youngest, near Al Medinah, came as late as A.D. 1250. Lake-bed deposits are very probably in large part Pliocene throughout the shield. The Red Sea coastal plain in Saudi Arabia rises gently eastward from a 3 m littoral surface, generally underlain by dead reef from the Yemen border northward to Al Wajd, a distance of 1400 km. At Jizan, in the south, a salt dome has pushed the 3 m surface up to an elevation of about 50 m. From Al Wajd northward, Pleistocene terraces have been faulted, culminating in several surfaces as high as 520 m above the Red Sea at Tiran Island. Ramping of major fault-bounded blocks along the eastern side of the Red Sea trough-the Midian block in the north, a poorly defined central block, and the Asir block in the south-is connected with renewed movement on regional Precambrian faults. Drainage patterns of wadis in these blocks are characteristically affected by the ramping, and stream capture is common in the Midian and Asir blocks.

Publication Year 1970
Title Eastern margin of the Red Sea and the coastal structures in Saudi Arabia
DOI 10.1098/rsta.1970.0024
Authors Glen F. Brown
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society A: Mathematical, Physical and Engineering Sciences
Index ID 70205598
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse