ABSTRACT
A survey of the literature that deals with the gabbroic rocks
believed to comprise the foundation of the oceanic crust indicates
that the overwhelming majority of these rocks are recovered from
escarpments associated with transform faults. The wide range of
mineral and chemical compositions characterizing oceanic gabbroic
rocks suggests that the lower oceanic crust is much more
heterogeneous in nature than was previously suggested by the
results of geophysical investigations. The examination of gabbroic
rocks recovered in situ from the walls of the Mid-Cayman Rise rift
valley by the submersible ALVIN not only supports the notion that
oceanic gabbroic rocks are heterogeneous in nature but also that
widely varying gabbroic rock types are found distributed
heterogeneously on the walls at a scale of tens of meters.
Observations that the largest escarpments on the walls of the Rise
have only several hundreds of meters of vertical offset, and that
gabbroic rocks were recovered to within roughly 100 meters of the
tops of the rift valley walls, indicate that the shallow intrusive
and extrusive carapace of the oceanic crust here must be
anomalously thin. It has been suggested that thin oceanic crust
characterizes slowly-slipping. ridge-transform intersections
elsewhere; the thin crust of the Mid-Cayman Rise may be
attributable to the presence of the two long transform faults that
bound the 110 km long Rise segment. The two transforms may also
have an instantaneous effect on the structural evolution of the
Rise creating the well-defined tectonic grain that strikes at a
high angle to the axis of the rift valley.
Stroup, J.B., 1981. Geologic investigations in the Cayman Trough
and the nature of the plutonic foundation of the oceanic
crust. Unpublished MSc. thesis, State University of New York
at Albany. 189pp., +xi.
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