scholarly journals Microseismicity evidence for subduction of the Caribbean plate beneath the South American Plate in northwestern Venezuela

1997 ◽  
Vol 102 (B8) ◽  
pp. 17875-17881 ◽  
Author(s):  
Omar J. Pérez ◽  
Martha A. Jaimes ◽  
Emilio Garciacaro
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ángela María Gómez-García ◽  
Álvaro González ◽  
Magdalena Scheck-Wenderoth ◽  
Denis Anikiev ◽  
Gaspar Monsalve ◽  
...  

<p>Active continental margins are potentially exposed to geohazards of different nature, including earthquakes and gas hydrate destabilisation, which may result in submarine landslides and devastating tsunamis. The northern margin of the South American plate is characterised by two flat-slab subductions: the Nazca plate from the west, and the Caribbean plate from the north. This defines a complex and poorly understood tectonic setting which poses a risk for the inhabitants of the region.</p><p>Gaining insight into the physical conditions (such as rock strength and temperature) at which earthquakes nucleate in this region requires building an improved lithospheric model, and determining the thermal and rheological states of the tectonic plates involved in this subduction system.</p><p>Combining 3D lithospheric-scale thermal and rheological modelling is a novel approach to establish the spatial variation of seismogenic zones, both at shallow and intermediate depths, thus providing crucial information about the range of conditions at which earthquakes may occur. This method is especially useful in regions like the South Caribbean where more classical approaches are limited because seismic records do not extend far back in time and the frequency of megathrust earthquakes is low.</p><p>Furthermore, in river-dominated continental margins, such as the South Caribbean, the destabilisation of gas hydrates deposits has been recently recognised as one of the most important triggering factors of submarine landslides. Gas hydrates are stable in low-temperature and high-pressure environments, normally found in marine sediments within continental slopes, with dominant temperatures ranging from 5°C to 10°C, at depths greater than 400 m. However, the gas hydrate stability zone is mainly controlled by the local geothermal gradient and the bottom water temperature, being both parameters influenced by the particular setting of each region.</p><p>Our research aims to evaluate the physical state of the seismogenic zones in the northern margin of the South American plate and Panama microplate, and to identify the locations of potential gas hydrates accumulation in the South Caribbean margin.</p><p>Here we present the complete workflow of this analysis, starting from the definition of an up-to-date 3D lithospheric-scale model which has been validated with the forward modelling of gravity anomalies. This model is the main input for calculating the 3D steady-state thermal field and the 3D pressure field, using the software LYNX. Based on our modelled results, we evaluate the rheological behaviour of the present-day lithospheric configuration, considering the locations of the earthquakes from the Bulletin of the International Seismological Centre. Finally, by modelling the temperature and pressure within the marine sediments, we constrain the spatial distribution of the potential gas hydrate stability zone.</p><p>With this work we exemplify how 3D lithospheric-scale thermal and rheological models may contribute to the assessment of geohazards in a region such as the Caribbean Sea, where hundreds of thousands of coastal inhabitants, tourists and infrastructures are potentially at risk.</p>


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mayda Arrieta-Prieto ◽  
Carlos Zuluaga-Castrillón ◽  
Oscar Castellanos-Alarcón ◽  
Carlos Ríos-Reyes

<p>High-pressure complexes along the Earth's surface provide evidence of the processes involved in both the crystallization of rocks in the subduction channel and its exhumation. Such processes are key to understand the dynamics and evolution of subduction zones and to try to reconstruct P-T trajectories for these complexes.</p><p>Previous studies on the Raspas complex (southern Ecuador) agree to state that it is composed of metamorphic rocks, mainly blueschists and eclogites, containing the mineral assemblage: glaucophane + garnet + epidote + omphacite + white mica + rutile ± quartz ± apatite ± pyrite ± calcite; which stabilized in metamorphic conditions of high pressure and low temperature. Additionally, the Raspas Complex has been genetically related to accretion and subduction processes of seamounts, which occurred in South America during the Late Jurassic - Early Cretaceous interval; and the exhumation of the complex was related to subduction channels. However, the evidence presented in the existing literature makes little emphasis on the reconstruction of thermobarometric models for the rocks of this complex.</p><p>By combining petrographic observations, whole-rock chemistry, and mineral chemistry in this work; it was possible to determine that pressure values of 10 ± 3 Kbar and temperature values of 630 ± 30 ° C, (obtained by simulations with THERMOCALC®) correspond to an event of retrograde metamorphism, suffered by the complex during its exhumation. This theory is complemented by the specific textures (that suggest this retrograde process) observed during petrographic analysis, such as amphibole replacing pyroxene, garnet chloritization, plagioclase crystallization and rutile replacement by titanite.</p><p>The results obtained, together with the thermobarometry data published for the Arquía complex in Colombia, allow us to establish a P-T trajectory, that may suggest a genetic relationship between these two complexes as a result of the tectonic processes associated with an active subduction margin that affected the NW margin of the South American plate at the end of the Jurassic.</p><p> </p>


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