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Resumen de Tectono-magmatic reactivation of Téfidet Cretaceous trough during Cenozoic (Aïr, Niger)

Yacouba Ahmed, Moussa Konaté, Moussa Harouna

  • The Téfidet trough (eastern Niger) belongs to the Ténéré megasystem set of Cretaceous rifts N130°E to N170°E oriented, corresponding to the direction of the Lake Chad-Hoggar tectonic axis.

    The study of the relationship between the structure of the trough and alkaline fissural volcanism that developed there from the Oligocene to Plio-Quaternary shows the uniqueness of the Téfidet trough compared to the neighboring contemporary volcanic areas of Hoggar, Cameroon, and southern Aïr.

    The tectono-magmatic reactivation of the Cretaceous Téfidet trough developed in two steps:

    – a period contemporaneous with the Tuareg shield bulging (Aïr, Hoggar, Iforas);

    – a subsequent extension period generally N060°E, which has persisted since the opening of the South Atlantic (upper Jurassic to Plio-Quaternary).

    The fissural volcanism, due to the reactivation of Pan African and Cretaceous faults evolved concomitantly with the N060°E extension (syn-magmatic micro-fractures with basaltic filling), in several steps, from Oligocene to Plio-Quaternary.

    This study highlights the existence of periods of quietness and recovery of volcanic activity, for which two assumptions can be made:

    – no enough absolute datings, – apolyphased extension of the rift.

    The latter hypothesis seems to be supported by three periods of volcanic quietness, 28–24 m.y., 20–14 m.y. and 8–5 m.y., observed in the northern and the southern Aïr, Gréboun and Todgha, respectively.


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