Dynamic and kinematic characterization of the basement structures of the Mocho-Choshuenco Volcanic Complex, Southern Andes, Chile

Author(s):  
Carolina Peña ◽  
Catalina Cabello ◽  
Andrés Tassara
2008 ◽  
Vol 174 (4) ◽  
pp. 284-294 ◽  
Author(s):  
J.M. Ibáñez ◽  
E. Del Pezzo ◽  
C. Bengoa ◽  
A. Caselli ◽  
G. Badi ◽  
...  

2011 ◽  
Vol 96 (11-12) ◽  
pp. 1828-1837 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Rossi ◽  
M. R. Ghiara ◽  
G. Chita ◽  
F. Capitelli

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrea Córdova ◽  
Pedro Espin ◽  
Daniel Pacheco

<p>The Chiles - Cerro Negro Volcanic Complex (CVCCN) is located in the Western cordillera at the Ecuador – Colombia border. This volcanic complex has showed an anomalous seismic activity since late 2013, with high activity peaks in 2014, specially in October and November with up to 6000 earthquakes per day mostly volcanic-tectonics events. The most important earthquake in this sequence occurred on October 20, 2014 with a 5.7 Mw. In order to obtain a better characterization of the seismic source in the CVCCN area, a new 1D velocity model was computed using 300 earthquakes with magnitudes larger than 3.0 MLv, and high quality of P and S pickings.  This model has 8 layers over a semi-space and starts with a Vp = 2.96 Km/s and  Vs = 1.69 Km/s highlighting strong variations at 7km with Vp = 5.87 Km/s and  Vs = 3.52 Km/s and at 24 km Vp = 6.58 Km/s and  Vs = 3.79 Km/s . A value of 1.73 of Vp/Vs was determined, which is a normal for the continental crust. Computed hypocenters with the new velocity model highlighted two sources: one is defined by a concentration of shallow earthquakes on the southern flank of Chiles Volcano, and the second one contains events deeper than 7 km and follows a N-S tectonic structure that crosses the CVCCN and matches the Cauca-Patía fault. This structure obtained with this new model is confirmed by interferograms from Sentinel images after the earthquake MLv 4.2 of September 27, 2019 where a mostly dextral movement is defined. Focal mechanisms were computed for earthquakes larger than MLV 4.0 using waveform inversion (SeisComp3). Most events show ~N-S planes and dextral with inverse component. Focal mechanisms exhibit a Non-Double Couple component (CLVD), which in most of these events is more than 40 percent including the CLVD = 71% calculated for the earthquake of Mw 5.7 on October 20, 2014. This value suggests the presence of a volumetric component that could be induced by magma or fluid movements. This is corroborated by the presence of LP and VLP events inside of the CVCCN system.</p>


2003 ◽  
Vol 67 (6) ◽  
pp. 1221-1229 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Gianfagna ◽  
P. Ballirano ◽  
F. Bellatreccia ◽  
B. Bruni ◽  
L. Paoletti ◽  
...  

AbstractAn epidemiological and environmental study of the area around Biancavilla (CT, Italy) was prompted by a significant incidence of malignant pleural mesothelioma, which was not related to a specific occupational activity. An environmental dispersion of fibres was found and attributed to local quarry activities, whose extracted volcanic products also contained fibrous amphiboles and had been used extensively in the local building industry, especially in the period 1960–1970.Abundant yellowish and grey-whitish asbestiform amphiboles with strongly asymmetric morphology were identified in this study, intimately associated with albitic feldspar, hematite and very minor orthopyroxene. These minerals fill the pores of the altered volcanic host rock (metasomatized benmoreitic lavas and pyroclastic rocks). The Rietveld method allowed a quantitative mineralogical analysis of the mineral mixture (24% amphiboles-asbestos, 73% feldspar and 3% hematite).The crystal size and morphology of the grey-whitish amphibole fibres do not allow quantitative microprobe analyses; semi-quantitative EDS-SEM analyses of a prismatic mineral known to be fluoroedenite and the unknown fibrous crystals studied here suggest that they are the same mineral, although the fibres are generally depleted in Ca and Mg. The F content is the same in both occurrences. Unitcell parameters of the fibres are: a = 9.815(1), b = 17.992(3), c = 5.2733(6) Å , β = 104.547(9)º, V = 901.4(3)Å3, and the refractive indices are in the range 1.60 –1.63. Optical, chemical and Rietveld analyses of the fibres confirm their similarity with the yellow prismatic fluoro-edenite previously analysed.Biancavilla is the first occurrence of amphibole fibres in a volcanic context (the Etnean volcanic complex). These fibres have a very anomalous composition (high ANa, IVAl and O3F contents) in comparison to other known oncogenic minerals.


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