Abstract

The transition between extensional and compressional-driven magnetic fabrics in sedimentary rocks is explored in this paper through the study of an example of the Basque–Cantabrian basin. In the area where extensional structures prevail and no superimposed deformation is observed, except for gentle large-scale folds, the magnetic fabric is interpreted as extensional, in consistency with mesostructural (tension gashes) and macrostructural (large-scale faults) data. Compressional tectonic fabrics are unequivocally interpreted in the area with cleavage development related to the buttressing of the syn-rift sequence against faults located near the northern basin margin. In this area, kmax is oriented according either to the intersection lineation or the dip direction of cleavage planes. In the area located in-between, where no macroscopic evidence of either compression or extension exist, there is a transitional fabric between compressional (resulting from the modification during inversion of a previous sedimentary or extensional fabric) and extensional (inherited from the extensional stage) magnetic fabrics that correlate with subtle evidences at the microscopic scale (pressure shadows, deformation and re-orientation of nodules). Therefore, the magnetic fabric is revealed as an exceptionally sensitive marker of deformation in sedimentary rocks. This transition in the magnetic fabric occurs within a length of 6.25 km along the cross-section that correlates with a thickness of 200 m of the stratigraphic pile. These results indicate that even in the absence of clear structural markers of compressional deformation, extensional magnetic fabrics can be only interpreted when there is a minimum separation (in the vertical or the horizontal) to the cleavage front.

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