Abstract

Abstract Compared segments of the East and West Indian passive margins have different evolutions and crustal architecture. The East Indian margin is less magmatic. It results from a crust first–mantle second break-up scenario of a continent experiencing two rift events. The West Indian margin is more magmatic. It results from a mantle first–crust second break-up scenario of a continent experiencing four rift events. The architecture across both margins can be divided into stretching, thinning and hyperextension zones. The East Indian margin is characterized by oceanward-dipping listric normal faults that accommodate thinning in the thinning and hyperextension zones, and a zone of exhumed mantle separating continental and oceanic crusts. The West Indian margin in contrast is characterized by landward-dipping listric faults that accommodate magma-assisted thinning in the thinning and hyperextension zones, and no exhumed mantle. The final break-up affects the lithospheric mantle layer in the East Indian case and the crustal layer in the West Indian case. Although the temperature-dependent rheologies of these two last unbroken layers are somewhat different, seismic interpretation suggests that they are both broken by upward-convex normal faults, which succeeded the development of listric faults. They appear to be the first spontaneously formed faults in the break-up-delivering process, although their nucleation may be magma-assisted. The main difference between the controlling factors of the aforementioned break-up scenarios affecting similar lithospheres at similar extension rates is the cumulative length of time of the pre-break-up rift events, which is 62 and 115 myr for the East and West Indian margins, respectively.

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