Coevolution of craton margins and interiors during continental break-up.
Thomas M GernonThea K HincksSascha BruneJean BraunStephen M JonesDerek KeirAlice CunninghamAnne GlerumPublished in: Nature (2024)
Many cratonic continental fragments dispersed during the rifting and break-up of Gondwana are bound by steep topographic landforms known as 'great escarpments' 1-4 , which rim elevated plateaus in the craton interior 5,6 . In terms of formation, escarpments and plateaus are traditionally considered distinct owing to their spatial separation, occasionally spanning more than a thousand kilometres. Here we integrate geological observations, statistical analysis, geodynamic simulations and landscape-evolution models to develop a physical model that mechanistically links both phenomena to continental rifting. Escarpments primarily initiate at rift-border faults and slowly retreat at about 1 km Myr -1 through headward erosion. Simultaneously, rifting generates convective instabilities in the mantle 7-10 that migrate cratonward at a faster rate of about 15-20 km Myr -1 along the lithospheric root, progressively removing cratonic keels 11 , driving isostatic uplift of craton interiors and forming a stable, elevated plateau. This process forces a synchronized wave of denudation, documented in thermochronology studies, which persists for tens of millions of years and migrates across the craton at a comparable or slower pace. We interpret the observed sequence of rifting, escarpment formation and exhumation of craton interiors as an evolving record of geodynamic mantle processes tied to continental break-up, upending the prevailing notion of cratons as geologically stable terrains.