Stratigraphic and sedimentological fieldwork on the Falkland Islands confirms that they were originally part of South Africa. East and West Falkland have contrasting geological and deformation histories and are separated by the Falkland Sound fault, which marks a significant deformation edge to the Cape Fold Belt. The degree of structural deformation and metamorphism in West Falkland is substantially less than that of East Falkland, adjustments to differential shortening between the two islands being reflected by structures developed along the Falkland Sound fault. Prior to fragmentation of Gondwana the Falkland Platform and Maurice Ewing Bank were positioned in the Natal Valley, adjacent to the east coast of South Africa. This predrift reconstruction shows that the Falkland Islands have subsequently been rotated by 180¿ relative to South Africa and complements recent palaeomagnetic data. There was a complete overlap of the Maurice Ewing Bank and Falkland Platform to the exclusion of the Falkland Plateau Basin which is a small oceanic basin formed during the Jurassic fragmentation of Gondwana. Extension in this basin was accommodated by movements along the Aghulas Falkland Fracture Zone and the Gastre Fault System. Predrift restoration of these faults shows that Patagonia was positioned closer to both Africa and Antarctica. The Falkland Plateau Basin was an integral component of the West Gondwana Jurassic microplate system and provides an invaluable insight into the evolution of its western margin. At some time prior to the main opening of the South Atlantic, the Falkland Platform was rotated clockwise by 120¿ against the Agulhas Falkland Fracture Zone, such that the Falkland Islands were translated some 300 km to the south. The driving force for this rotation is not known but could possibly have been initiated by periodic stress buildups in the Falkland Plateau Basin as the Gastre Fault System, within continental crust, became unable to accommodate the continuous dextral shear in the Agulhas Falkland Fracture Zone. The Falkland Islands represent an outboard extension of the Eastern Cape and are significant for understanding the paleogeography of both the Cape and Karoo supergroups. East Falkland is closely similar to South Africa in its geology, while West Falkland shows significant contrasts with both the Devonian and Permian successions being more proximal in character but still demonstrate the eastward continuation of the Cape and Karoo basins. |