@misc{71055, type = "Article", year = "2020", title = "Gondwana breakup: messages from the North Natal Valley", journal = "Terra Nova", editor = "Wiley", volume = "32", number = "3", pages = "205-214", author = "Moulin Maryline, Aslanian Daniel, Evain Mikael, Leprêtre Angelique, Schnurle Philippe, Verrier Fanny, Thompson Joseph Offei, de Clarens P., Leroy S., Dias N.", url = "", organization = "", address = "FRANCE, PORTUGAL", doi = "https://doi.org/10.1111/ter.12448", abstract = "
The Natal Valley, offshore Mozambique, is a key area for understanding the evolution of East Gondwana. Within the scope of the integrated multidisciplinary PAMELA project, we present new wide‐angle seismic data and interpretations, which considerably alter Geoscience paradigms. These data reveal the presence of a 30 km‐thick crust that we argue to be of continental nature. This falsifies all the most recent paleo‐reconstructions of the Gondwana. This 30 km‐thick continental crust 1000 m below sea level implies a complex history with probable intrusions of mantle‐derived melts in the lower crust, connected to several occurrences of magmatism, which seems to evidence the crucial role of the lower continental crust in passive margin genesis.
", key = "" }