Abstract

The Ivory Coast-Ghana (ICG) marginal ridge is a prominent feature of the ICG transform margin and includes a fossil ridge partially buried by a thick, undeformed sedimentary cover. The fossil ICG ridge is 130 km long and 25 km wide, and towers over the adjacent rifted basin (deep Ivorian basin, DIB) and the oceanic crust by 1.3 km and more than 4 km, respectively. It formed in three successive stages. 1. (1) During the rifting of the DIB, both vertical and horizontal motions between the DIB and the South American plate varied along the plate boundary. This relative motion occurred in an accommodation zone that tilted the northern slope of the ICG ridge along en-échelon, mainly strike-slip, faults. 2. (2) After the rifting of the DIB, the relative motion remained constant along the transform plate boundary. At this time strike-slip deformation was localized into a narrow and highly deformed belt that truncated the accommodation zone. 3. (3) Finally, the transform motion occurred between the DIB and an occanic plate. Thermal exchanges between the two adjacent plates induced thermal uplift of the ICG ridge that amplified previous tectonic tilting.

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