Chile Ridge: Difference between revisions
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{{Short description|Submarine oceanic ridge in the Pacific Ocean}} |
{{Short description|Submarine oceanic ridge in the Pacific Ocean}} |
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[[File:Americas Tectonic Plate Map - by NOAA.jpg|thumb|upright=1.35|Relationship of the Chile Ridge (Chile Rise) and other plate boundaries (CTJ=Chile |
[[File:Americas Tectonic Plate Map - by NOAA.jpg|thumb|upright=1.35|Relationship of the Chile Ridge (Chile Rise) and other plate boundaries (CTJ=Chile triple junction; Yellow arrows show direction of relative motion of plates)]] |
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The '''Chile Ridge''', also known as the '''Chile Rise''', is a submarine [[Mid-ocean ridge|oceanic ridge]] formed by the [[Divergent Plate Boundary|divergent plate boundary]] between the [[Nazca |
The '''Chile Ridge''', also known as the '''Chile Rise''', is a submarine [[Mid-ocean ridge|oceanic ridge]] formed by the [[Divergent Plate Boundary|divergent plate boundary]] between the [[Nazca plate]] and the [[Antarctic plate]]. It extends from the triple junction of the Nazca, [[Pacific plate|Pacific]], and Antarctic plates to the Southern coast of [[Chile]].<ref name=":9" /><ref name=":5" /> The Chile Ridge is easy to recognize on the map, as the ridge is divided into several segmented [[fracture zone]]s which are perpendicular to the ridge segments, showing an [[Orthogonality|orthogonal]] shape toward the spreading direction. The total length of the ridge segments is about {{cvt|550|–|600|km|mi nmi}}.<ref name=":9" /> |
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The continuously spreading Chile Ridge collides with the southern [[South American |
The continuously spreading Chile Ridge collides with the southern [[South American plate]] to the east, and the ridge has been [[Subduction|subducting]] underneath the [[Taitao Peninsula]] since 14 million years ago (Ma).<ref name=":9" /><ref name=":5" /> The ridge-collision has generated a [[slab window]] beneath the overlying South America Plate, with smaller volume of [[Upper mantle (Earth)|upper mantle]] [[magma]] melt, proven by an abrupt low [[velocity]] of magma flow rate below the separating Chile ridge.<ref name=":5" /><ref name=":9" /><ref name=":1" /> The subduction generates a special type of [[igneous rock]]s, represented by the [[Taitao ophiolite]]s, which is an [[Ultramafic rock|ultramafic]] rock composed of [[olivine]] and [[pyroxene]], usually found in [[Oceanic crust|oceanic plates]].<ref name=":8">{{Citation|last1=Bourgois|first1=Jacques|title=A Review on Forearc Ophiolite Obduction, Adakite-Like Generation, and Slab Window Development at the Chile Triple Junction Area: Uniformitarian Framework for Spreading-Ridge Subduction|date=2016|url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-51529-8_2|pages=3217–3246|place=Cham|publisher=Springer International Publishing|access-date=2021-11-10|last2=Lagabrielle|first2=Yves|last3=Martin|first3=Hervé|last4=Dyment|first4=Jérôme|last5=Frutos|first5=Jose|last6=Cisternas|first6=Maria Eugenia|series=Pageoph Topical Volumes|doi=10.1007/978-3-319-51529-8_2|isbn=978-3-319-51528-1}}</ref><ref name=":5" /> In addition, the subduction of the Chile Ridge also creates Taitao [[granite]] in Taitao Peninsula which appeared as [[Igneous intrusion|plutons]].<ref name=":5" /><ref name=":13">{{Cite journal|last1=Anma|first1=Ryo|last2=Armstrong|first2=Richard|last3=Orihashi|first3=Yuji|last4=Ike|first4=Shin-ichi|last5=Shin|first5=Ki-Cheol|last6=Kon|first6=Yoshiaki|last7=Komiya|first7=Tsuyoshi|last8=Ota|first8=Tsutomu|last9=Kagashima|first9=Shin-ichi|last10=Shibuya|first10=Takazo|date=November 2009|title=Are the Taitao granites formed due to subduction of the Chile ridge?|url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.lithos.2009.05.018|journal=Lithos|volume=113|issue=1–2|pages=246–258|doi=10.1016/j.lithos.2009.05.018|bibcode=2009Litho.113..246A|hdl=2241/104215|issn=0024-4937|hdl-access=free}}</ref> |
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The Chile Ridge involves [[Mid-ocean ridge|spreading ridge]] [[subduction]] which is worth studying because it explains how the [[Archean felsic volcanic rocks|Archean continental crust]] initiation formed from deep oceanic crust.<ref name=":8" /> |
The Chile Ridge involves [[Mid-ocean ridge|spreading ridge]] [[subduction]] which is worth studying because it explains how the [[Archean felsic volcanic rocks|Archean continental crust]] initiation formed from deep oceanic crust.<ref name=":8" /> |
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== Regional geology == |
== Regional geology == |
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=== Geology of the Chile ridge === |
=== Geology of the Chile ridge === |
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[[File:Chile ridge Zoom in.png|thumb|upright=1.8|Fig-1 Map of the Chile ridge in the Pacific Ocean. The red line and red letters 'CR' represents Chile ridge. The ridge is divided into numerous segments of the [[Fault (geology)|fault line]] indicated by black lines. 'FZ' means [[fracture zone]]. The pink arrows indicate the direction of the [[Nazca |
[[File:Chile ridge Zoom in.png|thumb|upright=1.8|Fig-1 Map of the Chile ridge in the Pacific Ocean. The red line and red letters 'CR' represents Chile ridge. The ridge is divided into numerous segments of the [[Fault (geology)|fault line]] indicated by black lines. 'FZ' means [[fracture zone]]. The pink arrows indicate the direction of the [[Nazca plate]] and [[Antarctic plate]] movements as well as their rate of migration. They show that the Nazca plate is moving in an ENE direction, which is oblique to the boundary with the [[South American plate]], while the Antarctica Plate is moving in an E-W direction, which is almost perpendicular to the plate boundary. In addition, the Nazca plate migrates over four times faster than the Antarctica Plate. The dark purple circle shows the [[Taitao Peninsula]] where the Chile ridge collides to the South American plate. The yellow line shows the [[Plate tectonics|plate boundary]].<ref name=":9">{{Cite journal|last1=Tebbens|first1=S. F.|last2=Cande|first2=S. C.|last3=Kovacs|first3=L.|last4=Parra|first4=J. C.|last5=LaBrecque|first5=J. L.|last6=Vergara|first6=H.|date=1997-06-10|title=The Chile ridge: A tectonic framework|journal=Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth|volume=102|issue=B6|pages=12035–12059|doi=10.1029/96jb02581|bibcode=1997JGR...10212035T|issn=0148-0227|doi-access=free}}</ref>]] |
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The geology of the Chile ridge is closely related to the geology of the Taitao Peninsula (East of the Chile ridge). This is because the Chile ridge subducts beneath the Taitao Peninsula, which give rise to unique [[Lithology|lithologies]] there.<ref name=":8" /><ref name=":13" /> The lithological units would be discussed from youngest to oldest, and Taitao Granites and Taitao Ophiolite would be our main focus. |
The geology of the Chile ridge is closely related to the geology of the Taitao Peninsula (East of the Chile ridge). This is because the Chile ridge subducts beneath the Taitao Peninsula, which give rise to unique [[Lithology|lithologies]] there.<ref name=":8" /><ref name=":13" /> The lithological units would be discussed from youngest to oldest, and Taitao Granites and Taitao Ophiolite would be our main focus. |
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==== Taitao Granites (Adakite-like rocks in Late-Miocene) ==== |
==== Taitao Granites (Adakite-like rocks in Late-Miocene) ==== |
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[[Adakite]] [[magmatism]] is formed by the melting of the Nazca |
[[Adakite]] [[magmatism]] is formed by the melting of the Nazca plate's trailing edge.<ref name=":5" /> Due to the subduction of the Chile Ridge beneath the South American plate, there were [[Intrusive rock|intrusive]] magmatism which generates granite.<ref name=":8" /> This is also formed by the [[partial melting]] of the subducted oceanic crust.<ref name=":8" /><ref name=":13" /> The young Nazca crust (less than 18 Myr old) are warmer so that the [[Metamorphic rock|metamorphosed]] subducted basalts are melted.<ref name=":13" /><ref name=":8" /> In normal [[Mid-ocean ridge|mid-oceanic ridge]], the presence of [[Volatile (astrogeology)|volatiles]] like water also reduces the [[Solidus (chemistry)|solidus]] temperature.<ref name=":8" /> However, in Chile Ridge, there is relatively low-extent (20%) of partial melting of the lithosphere, the pressure and the temperature of the partial melting is less than 10 kbar and higher than 650° respectively.<ref name=":8" /> This is because the warm young Nazca plate has hindered high rate of cooling and [[dehydration]]. The partial melting of the Taitao granite creates plutons like the [[Tres Montes Peninsula|Cabo Raper]] adakitic pluton.<ref name=":8" /> |
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===== Characteristics of Taitao Granites ===== |
===== Characteristics of Taitao Granites ===== |
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==== Taitao Ophiolite (pillow lava, sheeted dikes, gabbro, ultramafic rocks in Late-Miocene) ==== |
==== Taitao Ophiolite (pillow lava, sheeted dikes, gabbro, ultramafic rocks in Late-Miocene) ==== |
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{{main|Taitao ophiolite}} |
{{main|Taitao ophiolite}} |
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Along the axis in the Chile ridge, magmatic rocks which are mafic to ultramafic are emplaced.<ref name=":8" /> For instance, the [[Taitao ophiolite]] complex is discovered in the westernmost of the Taitao Peninsula (east of the Chile Ridge), about 50 km southeast of the Chile |
Along the axis in the Chile ridge, magmatic rocks which are mafic to ultramafic are emplaced.<ref name=":8" /> For instance, the [[Taitao ophiolite]] complex is discovered in the westernmost of the Taitao Peninsula (east of the Chile Ridge), about 50 km southeast of the Chile triple junction. This is contributed by the [[obduction]] of the Nazca plate produced due to the [[Convergent boundary|convergence]] of the overriding South America Plate and the Chile ridge [[Tres Montes Peninsula|Tres Montes]] segment.<ref name=":5" /><ref name=":6">{{Cite journal|last1=Veloso|first1=Eugenio E|last2=Anma|first2=Ryo|last3=Yamaji|first3=Atsushi|date=January 2009|title=Ophiolite Emplacement and the Effects of the Subduction of the Active Chile Ridge System: Heterogeneous Paleostress Regimes Recorded in the Taitao Ophiolite (Southern Chile)|journal=Andean Geology|volume=36|issue=1|doi=10.4067/s0718-71062009000100002|issn=0718-7106|doi-access=free}}</ref> The obduction and the thrusting causes low-pressure metamorphism and forms the ophiolite complex. This metamorphism indicates the onset of [[Metasomatism|hydrothermal alteration]] in a spreading ridge environment.<ref name=":8" /><ref name=":6" /> There are also recent activities of [[Acid rock (geology)|acidic magmas]] in the Taitao Peninsula which allows the comparison between the past composition and current composition, history of the magma can be determined.<ref name=":5" /><ref name=":4">{{Cite journal|last1=Cande|first1=S. C.|last2=Leslie|first2=R. B.|last3=Parra|first3=J. C.|last4=Hobart|first4=M.|date=1987|title=Interaction between the Chile Ridge and Chile Trench: Geophysical and geothermal evidence|url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1029/jb092ib01p00495|journal=Journal of Geophysical Research|volume=92|issue=B1|pages=495|doi=10.1029/jb092ib01p00495|bibcode=1987JGR....92..495C|issn=0148-0227}}</ref> |
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===== Characteristics of Taitao Ophiolite ===== |
===== Characteristics of Taitao Ophiolite ===== |
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Taitao [[ophiolite]] lithosphere forms a special sequence from the top to bottom: [[pillow lava]]s, [[Sheeted dyke complex|sheeted dike]] complex, [[gabbro]]s and [[Ultramafic rock|ultramafic]] rock units. For the ultramafic rock units, it proved that there are at least two melting events that happened before.<ref name=":5" /><ref name=":10" /> |
Taitao [[ophiolite]] lithosphere forms a special sequence from the top to bottom: [[pillow lava]]s, [[Sheeted dyke complex|sheeted dike]] complex, [[gabbro]]s and [[Ultramafic rock|ultramafic]] rock units. For the ultramafic rock units, it proved that there are at least two melting events that happened before.<ref name=":5" /><ref name=":10" /> |
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The thermal configuration and the structure of the subduction zone affects the interactions of the [[Oceanic crust|oceanic lithosphere]], seafloor sediments, the eroded rock from the overlying South American |
The thermal configuration and the structure of the subduction zone affects the interactions of the [[Oceanic crust|oceanic lithosphere]], seafloor sediments, the eroded rock from the overlying South American plate, and the sub-arc mantle wedge as well as the chemical composition of the magma, that melts from the mantle.<ref name=":5" /> Due to the subduction of oceanic ridges (Chile Ridge) beneath the South American plate which has occurred since 16 Ma, this caused the alteration in the thermal configuration and the [[geometry]] of the sub-arc mantle wedge, creating a distinct chemical composition of magma generations.<ref name=":5" /> That means by understanding the composition of the magma, specific conditions of subduction systems can be known.<ref name=":5" /> This has found that the [[slab window]] produced by the subduction of the ridge causes the generation of [[alkali basalt]]. The ridge-trench convergence and slab window generation aids the [[Methods of pluton emplacement|emplacement]] of the alkaline basalts.<ref name=":5" /><ref name=":15">{{Cite journal|last1=Veloso|first1=Eugenio E|last2=Anma|first2=Ryo|last3=Yamaji|first3=Atsushi|date=January 2009|title=Ophiolite Emplacement and the Effects of the Subduction of the Active Chile Ridge System: Heterogeneous Paleostress Regimes Recorded in the Taitao Ophiolite (Southern Chile)|journal=[[Andean Geology]]|volume=36|issue=1|doi=10.4067/s0718-71062009000100002|issn=0718-7106|doi-access=free}}</ref> |
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{| class="wikitable" |
{| class="wikitable" |
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|+Summary of the geology in Chile ridge |
|+Summary of the geology in Chile ridge<ref name=":5" /> |
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!Age of the rocks |
!Age of the rocks |
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!Kinds of magmatism |
!Kinds of magmatism |
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|[[Volcanic arc|Arc magmatism]] |
|[[Volcanic arc|Arc magmatism]] |
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|Taitao Granites |
|Taitao Granites |
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|low-extent partial melting of the altered basalt (from the trailing edge of Nazca |
|low-extent partial melting of the altered basalt (from the trailing edge of Nazca plate) in a hot subduction event beneath the volcanic arc |
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|intermediate to felsic, [[Calc-alkaline magma series|calc-alkaline]], [[adakite]]s: high Sr/Y and La/Yb ratio |
|intermediate to felsic, [[Calc-alkaline magma series|calc-alkaline]], [[adakite]]s: high Sr/Y and La/Yb ratio |
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|[[Volcanic arc|Arc magmatism]] |
|[[Volcanic arc|Arc magmatism]] |
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|Taitao Ophiolite |
|Taitao Ophiolite |
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|obduction and uplift of the Nazca |
|obduction and uplift of the Nazca plate produced due to the convergence of the overriding South America Plate and the Chile ridge, causing low-pressure metamorphism |
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|mafic to ultramafic, [[olivine]] and [[pyroxene]] |
|mafic to ultramafic, [[olivine]] and [[pyroxene]] |
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=== Bathymetry === |
=== Bathymetry === |
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[[Bathymetry]] of the Chile ridge is inspected, which is the submarine topography that studies the depths of landforms under the water level.<ref>{{Cite web|date=2011-03-24|title=bathymetry|url=http://www.nationalgeographic.org/encyclopedia/bathymetry/|access-date=2021-10-05| |
[[Bathymetry]] of the Chile ridge is inspected, which is the submarine topography that studies the depths of landforms under the water level.<ref>{{Cite web|date=2011-03-24|title=bathymetry|url=http://www.nationalgeographic.org/encyclopedia/bathymetry/|access-date=2021-10-05|publisher=National Geographic Society}}</ref> It is discovered that there are large [[abyssal hill]]s extend along two sides of the ridge. The abyssal hills grow cyclically which is caused by the cyclic fault growth. During faulting cycles, the extension of the Chile ridge brought about 'diffusion' [[Tectonics|tectonic]] [[Deformation (geology)|deformation]] which forms numerous tiny faults. The continuous [[Divergent boundary|divergence]] of the ridge causes the [[Extensional tectonics|extensional strain]] to concentrate, the tiny faults to link together to generate tall and long abyssal-hill-scale faults. The huge faults push the old and inactive faults away from the ridge axis by extensional force. This process would repeat again. Therefore, the further the abyssal hill to the ridge axis, the older the age it is.<ref name=":10" /> |
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== The Chile Ridge movement == |
== The Chile Ridge movement == |
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[[File:Chileridgecloseup.png|thumb|upright=1.6|Fig-3 shows a '''close up view of the spreading Chile Ridge'''. With difference relative plane motion of Nazca |
[[File:Chileridgecloseup.png|thumb|upright=1.6|Fig-3 shows a '''close up view of the spreading Chile Ridge'''. With difference relative plane motion of Nazca plate and Antarctica plate, this creates an extensional force for sea floor spreading to carry out.<ref>{{cite book|last1=Steel|first1=Ron|last2=Gloppen|first2=Tor Gunnar|date=1980-09-11|chapter=Late Caledonian (Devonian) Basin Formation, Western Norway: Signs of Strike-Slip Tectonics during Infilling|chapter-url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/9781444303735.ch6|title=Sedimentation in Oblique-Slip Mobile Zones|pages=79–103|doi=10.1002/9781444303735.ch6|isbn=9780632006076}}</ref>]] |
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[[File:Evolutionarydiagramofchileridge (1).png|thumb|upright=1.8|Fig-4 shows the '''Evolutionary diagram of the Chile Ridge Movement.''' The magmatism of under Taitao Peninsula from about 6 Ma to 5.7–5.1 Ma is shown. CTJ stands for Chile |
[[File:Evolutionarydiagramofchileridge (1).png|thumb|upright=1.8|Fig-4 shows the '''Evolutionary diagram of the Chile Ridge Movement.''' The magmatism of under Taitao Peninsula from about 6 Ma to 5.7–5.1 Ma is shown. CTJ stands for Chile triple junction. '''A)''' The ridge is located at the edge of the Chile Trench. the Magma chambers developed and cause the upwelling of the ophiolite onto the surface of the spreading ridge. Cabo Raper pluton is also shown in the diagram. '''B)''' The old magma chamber is pushed away by the new magma chamber. Some ophiolite was also formed when the Nazca plate obducted and uplift. A new magma chamber was generated. The Chile Ridge segment subducts beneath the South American plate.<ref name=":13" /><ref name=":8" />]] |
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=== The spreading of the Chile Ridge === |
=== The spreading of the Chile Ridge === |
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The Chile Ridge is formed by the divergence of the Nazca and Antarctica plates.<ref name=":8" /> It is spreading actively at the rate of about 6.4 – 7.0 cm/year since 5 Ma to present.<ref name=":8" /> The [[Late Miocene]] Nazca-Antarctic spreading ridge formation creates about 550 km-long Chile Ridge as there are differences in the convergence rates between Nazca and Antarctica plates.<ref name=":5" /> According to the results from space geodetic observations, Nazca-South America converges four times faster than that of |
The Chile Ridge is formed by the divergence of the Nazca and Antarctica plates.<ref name=":8" /> It is spreading actively at the rate of about 6.4 – 7.0 cm/year since 5 Ma to present.<ref name=":8" /> The [[Late Miocene]] Nazca-Antarctic spreading ridge formation creates about 550 km-long Chile Ridge as there are differences in the convergence rates between Nazca and Antarctica plates.<ref name=":5" /> According to the results from space geodetic observations, Nazca-South America converges four times faster than that of Antarctica-South America.<ref name=":9" /><ref name=":10" /> |
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In addition, the direction of the Nazca |
In addition, the direction of the Nazca plate migration is different from the Antarctica plate migration since 3 Ma. The direction that Nazca plate moves is ENE, while the Antarctic plate is ESE. The net diverging movement of the two plates contributes to the spreading of the Chile Ridge.<ref name=":8" /> |
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{| class="wikitable" |
{| class="wikitable" |
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|+Plate motion of Nazca plate and Antarctica plate<ref name=":10" /><ref name=":5" /><ref name=":9" /> |
|+Plate motion of Nazca plate and Antarctica plate<ref name=":10" /><ref name=":5" /><ref name=":9" /> |
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=== Migration and subduction of the Chile ridge === |
=== Migration and subduction of the Chile ridge === |
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The subduction of the ridge started is an [[oblique subduction]] with 10° – 12° oblique to the Chile trench since 14 Ma,<ref name=":8" /> which subducts beneath the southeastern Southern Patagonia.<ref name=":9" /><ref name=":8" /> Thus it is found that both the Nazca-South American |
The subduction of the ridge started is an [[oblique subduction]] with 10° – 12° oblique to the Chile trench since 14 Ma,<ref name=":8" /> which subducts beneath the southeastern Southern Patagonia.<ref name=":9" /><ref name=":8" /> Thus it is found that both the Nazca-South American plate collision and Antarctic-South American plate collision have been taken place at the same time when the Chile ridge is separating, i.e. segments of Chile Ridge have been subducting beneath the South American plate.<ref name=":9" /> Due to the difference in the convergence rate, the formation of a [[slab window]] is favoured.<ref name=":9" /> Slab window is a gap underneath the South America Plate, where the overriding South America Plate has only little [[lithospheric mantle]] supporting it and is directly exposed to the hot [[Asthenosphere|asthenospheric mantle]].<ref name=":9" /> |
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The experimental results from the [[Magnetic anomaly|magnetic anomalies]] within the oceanic crust suggest that about in 14–10 Ma (late-Miocene), some of the Chile Ridge segments were subducted beneath the Southern Patagonian Peninsula (located between 48° and 54°S) subsequently.<ref name=":5" /> From 10 Ma to the present, Chile Ridge was separated into several short segments by the [[fracture zone]]s, and the segments of the ridge are subducted between 46° and 48° S.<ref name=":5" /><ref name=":9" /> The above findings have proven that Chile Ridge has been encountered a northward migration.<ref name=":5">{{Cite journal|last1=Ramírez de Arellano|first1=Cristóbal|last2=Calderón|first2=Mauricio|last3=Rivera|first3=Huber|last4=Valenzuela|first4=Mauricio|last5=Fanning|first5=C. Mark|last6=Paredes|first6=Eliot|date=October 2021|title=Neogene Patagonian magmatism between the rupture of the Farallon plate and the Chile Ridge subduction|journal=Journal of South American Earth Sciences|volume=110|pages=103238|doi=10.1016/j.jsames.2021.103238|bibcode=2021JSAES.11003238R|issn=0895-9811|doi-access=free}}</ref><ref name=":10" /><ref name=":8" /> Thus it has been found that the spreading rate of Chile Ridge from 23 Ma to the present has slowed down. While the spreading rate of the ridge is correlated to time of the collisions of ridge and trench.<ref name=":9" /> Some studies have different discoveries in the rate of spreading which shows that the ridge may have spread uniformly for about 31 km/Myr half spreading rate starting from 5.9 Ma.<ref name=":10">{{Cite journal|last1=Howell|first1=Samuel M.|last2=Ito|first2=Garrett|last3=Behn|first3=Mark D.|last4=Martinez|first4=Fernando|last5=Olive|first5= |
The experimental results from the [[Magnetic anomaly|magnetic anomalies]] within the oceanic crust suggest that about in 14–10 Ma (late-Miocene), some of the Chile Ridge segments were subducted beneath the Southern Patagonian Peninsula (located between 48° and 54°S) subsequently.<ref name=":5" /> From 10 Ma to the present, Chile Ridge was separated into several short segments by the [[fracture zone]]s, and the segments of the ridge are subducted between 46° and 48° S.<ref name=":5" /><ref name=":9" /> The above findings have proven that Chile Ridge has been encountered a northward migration.<ref name=":5">{{Cite journal|last1=Ramírez de Arellano|first1=Cristóbal|last2=Calderón|first2=Mauricio|last3=Rivera|first3=Huber|last4=Valenzuela|first4=Mauricio|last5=Fanning|first5=C. Mark|last6=Paredes|first6=Eliot|date=October 2021|title=Neogene Patagonian magmatism between the rupture of the Farallon plate and the Chile Ridge subduction|journal=Journal of South American Earth Sciences|volume=110|pages=103238|doi=10.1016/j.jsames.2021.103238|bibcode=2021JSAES.11003238R|issn=0895-9811|doi-access=free}}</ref><ref name=":10" /><ref name=":8" /> Thus it has been found that the spreading rate of Chile Ridge from 23 Ma to the present has slowed down. While the spreading rate of the ridge is correlated to time of the collisions of ridge and trench.<ref name=":9" /> Some studies have different discoveries in the rate of spreading which shows that the ridge may have spread uniformly for about 31 km/Myr half spreading rate starting from 5.9 Ma.<ref name=":10">{{Cite journal|last1=Howell|first1=Samuel M.|last2=Ito|first2=Garrett|last3=Behn|first3=Mark D.|last4=Martinez|first4=Fernando|last5=Olive|first5=Jean-Arthur|last6=Escartín|first6=Javier|date=June 2016|title=Magmatic and tectonic extension at the Chile Ridge: Evidence for mantle controls on ridge segmentation|journal=Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems|volume=17|issue=6|pages=2354–2373|doi=10.1002/2016gc006380|bibcode=2016GGG....17.2354H|s2cid=53126550 |issn=1525-2027|doi-access=free|hdl=1912/8312|hdl-access=free}}</ref> |
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=== Associated seismicity === |
=== Associated seismicity === |
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In the Chile Ridge Subduction Project (CRSP), [[Seismometer|seismic stations]] are deployed in the Chile |
In the Chile Ridge Subduction Project (CRSP), [[Seismometer|seismic stations]] are deployed in the Chile triple junction (CTJ).<ref name=":14" /> The [[Tectonics|tectonic]] activity and [[seismicity]] are mainly driven by the subduction of Chile Ridge.<ref name=":2" /> A slab window is formed as the Nazca and Antarctica Plate continues to diverge when colliding with Chile trench, a gap is created as new [[lithosphere]] production is becomes very slow.<ref name=":12" /><ref name=":1" /><ref name=":7">{{Citation|last=Elthon|first=Don|title=Experimental phase petrology of mid-ocean ridge basalts|date=1991|url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4615-3540-9_6|work=Oceanic Basalts|pages=94–115|place=Boston, MA|publisher=Springer US|doi=10.1007/978-1-4615-3540-9_6|isbn=978-1-4613-6571-6|access-date=2021-10-08}}</ref> Moderate to high offshore seismicities for [[Seismic magnitude scales|magnitude]] higher than 4 is detected in the segmented Chile Ridge as well as the transform faults.<ref name=":14">{{Cite journal|last1=Gallego|first1=A.|last2=Russo|first2=R. M.|last3=Comte|first3=D.|last4=Mocanu|first4=V. I.|last5=Murdie|first5=R. E.|last6=Vandecar|first6=J. C.|date=2010-07-05|title=Seismic noise tomography in the Chile ridge subduction region|journal=Geophysical Journal International|volume=182|issue=3|pages=1478–1492|doi=10.1111/j.1365-246x.2010.04691.x|bibcode=2010GeoJI.182.1478G|issn=0956-540X|doi-access=free}}</ref> It is predicted that the subduction of the spreading Chile Ridge under South America to the north of the Chile triple junction give rise to the seismic events. Furthermore, intraplate seismicity in the overriding South American plate is more likely resulted from the [[Deformation (engineering)|deformation]] of the Liquiñe-Ofqui fault system.<ref name=":12" /><ref name=":2" /><ref name=":0" /> |
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==== Chiloe |
==== Chiloe microplate ==== |
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This is a tiny plate between Nazca |
This is a tiny plate between Nazca plate and South American plate, it locates east of the Chile ridge. It is proved that Chiloe microplate (Fig-5, 6) is migrated northwards relative to the South American plate which is rather immobile. The [[Golfo de Penas]] basin is formed because of the northward movement of Chiloe microplate.<ref name=":0" /> |
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==== Seismicity of Liquiñe-Ofqui fault system in the Aysén Region ==== |
==== Seismicity of Liquiñe-Ofqui fault system in the Aysén Region ==== |
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The [[Liquiñe-Ofqui Fault|Liquiñe-Ofqui fault]] system is a right-lateral [[Fault (geology)|strike-slip fault]] separating Chiloe Microplate and the South America Plate.<ref name=":2" /> The northward migration of Chiloe Microplate along the Liquiñe-Ofqui fault creates the Golfo de Penas basin in the late Miocene period.<ref name=":0" /> |
The [[Liquiñe-Ofqui Fault|Liquiñe-Ofqui fault]] system is a right-lateral [[Fault (geology)|strike-slip fault]] separating Chiloe Microplate and the South America Plate.<ref name=":2" /> The northward migration of Chiloe Microplate along the Liquiñe-Ofqui fault creates the Golfo de Penas basin in the late Miocene period.<ref name=":0" /> |
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The Liquiñe-Ofqui fault is a fast-slipping fault (with a geodetic rate of 6.8–28 mm/yr).<ref name=":0" /> [[Intraplate earthquake|Intraplate seismicity]] has mainly been taken place in this fault system. Also, enormous stress from the Nazca |
The Liquiñe-Ofqui fault is a fast-slipping fault (with a geodetic rate of 6.8–28 mm/yr).<ref name=":0" /> [[Intraplate earthquake|Intraplate seismicity]] has mainly been taken place in this fault system. Also, enormous stress from the Nazca plates and South American plate collision has accumulated along the fault system.<ref name=":0" /><ref name=":2" /> Throughout history, only limited seismic studies have been conducted in the [[Aysén Region]], southern Chile. There is only an event of [[Seismic magnitude scales|seismic magnitude]] higher than 7 happening in 1927.<ref name=":2" /> This hinders the finding in seismicity near the Chile Ridge. Nevertheless, in 2007, the Liquiñe-Ofqui fault system releases the accumulated stress brought by the subduction of Nazca underneath the South America Plate with seismicity magnitude reaching 7 in an earthquake.<ref name=":0" /> Recently, 274 seismic events have been detected in 2004–2005.<ref name=":0" /> |
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==== Seismicity of the Patagonian |
==== Seismicity of the Patagonian slab window ==== |
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There is an intraplate seismicity gap between 47° and 50°S (area with abnormal high heat flow), which coincides with the [[Patagonia]]n [[slab window]], disrupting most [[Earthquake|seismic events]]. The local seismic data only reveals a low-magnitude (magnitude lower than 3.4) seismic event, which is not related to tectonic process. The reason behind this is that the Antarctica Plate undergoes shallow subduction which causes very limited seismic deformation.<ref name=":0" /><ref name=":12" /> (Fig-5) |
There is an intraplate seismicity gap between 47° and 50°S (area with abnormal high heat flow), which coincides with the [[Patagonia]]n [[slab window]], disrupting most [[Earthquake|seismic events]]. The local seismic data only reveals a low-magnitude (magnitude lower than 3.4) seismic event, which is not related to tectonic process. The reason behind this is that the Antarctica Plate undergoes shallow subduction which causes very limited seismic deformation.<ref name=":0" /><ref name=":12" /> (Fig-5) |
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Line 122: | Line 122: | ||
!Orientation of the maximum [[Compressive strength|compressional stress]] |
!Orientation of the maximum [[Compressive strength|compressional stress]] |
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|North of the Chile |
|North of the Chile triple junction |
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|intraplate seismic events concentrated along Liquiñe-Ofqui fault system |
|intraplate seismic events concentrated along Liquiñe-Ofqui fault system |
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|4–21 |
|4–21 |
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|1.5–6 |
|1.5–6 |
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|ENE–WSW (oblique to the [[Continental crust|continental]] margin of South American plate of N10°) |
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|South of the Chile |
|South of the Chile triple junction (between 46.5°-50°S) |
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|seismic events sparsely populated in Southern Patagon |
|seismic events sparsely populated in Southern Patagon |
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|12–15 |
|12–15 |
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|5 |
|5 |
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|ESE–WNW |
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|ESE-WNW |
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== Geological |
== Geological formation related to the Chile Ridge movement == |
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=== Consequence of the |
=== Consequence of the subduction of the Chile Ridge === |
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=== Patagonia |
=== Patagonia slab window === |
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[[File:Slab window cross-section.png|thumb|upright=1.7|Fig-5 This sketch shows the '''cross-section of the slab window.''' The Nazca plate and Antarctic |
[[File:Slab window cross-section.png|thumb|upright=1.7|Fig-5 This sketch shows the '''cross-section of the slab window.''' The Nazca plate and Antarctic plate is colliding with South American plate.<ref name=":1">{{Cite journal|last1=Russo|first1=R.M.|last2=VanDecar|first2=John C.|last3=Comte|first3=Diana|last4=Mocanu|first4=Victor I.|last5=Gallego|first5=Alejandro|last6=Murdie|first6=Ruth E.|date=2010|title=Subduction of the Chile Ridge: Upper mantle structure and flow|url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/gsatg61a.1|journal=GSA Today|pages=4–10|doi=10.1130/gsatg61a.1|issn=1052-5173}}</ref>]] |
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⚫ | The most obvious impact of the subduction of the Chile ridge is the formation of slab window. It is formed when the segments of separating Chile Ridge subducts under the southern South America Plate. The trailing edge of the Nazca plate is completely melted in the subduction zone, and the leading edge of the Antarctic |
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⚫ | The most obvious impact of the subduction of the Chile ridge is the formation of slab window. It is formed when the segments of separating Chile Ridge subducts under the southern South America Plate. The trailing edge of the Nazca plate is completely melted in the subduction zone, and the leading edge of the Antarctic plate diverges, a widening gap is created between the two plates as very little crust is melted after subduction. In this case, only a very little amount of magma is produced underneath the slab window.<ref name=":1" /> The mantle in the slab window is rather hotter than the mantle that melts from the lithospheric crust, and the generation of magma is very slow. This is due to low-extent of [[Hydration reaction|hydration]] to the subduction zone, decreasing [[mantle convection]] velocity, as the production of magma in the subduction zone is mainly driven by the hydration that lowers the [[partial melting]] of the crust. A [[volcanic arc]] gap is formed above the slab window as the magma melted from the crust convects slowly which hampers the [[volcanism]].<ref name=":7" /><ref name=":9" /><ref name=":5" /><ref name=":11">{{Cite journal|last1=Georgieva|first1=V.|last2=Gallagher|first2=K.|last3=Sobczyk|first3=A.|last4=Sobel|first4=E.R.|last5=Schildgen|first5=T.F.|last6=Ehlers|first6=T.A.|last7=Strecker|first7=M.R.|date=April 2019|title=Effects of slab-window, alkaline volcanism, and glaciation on thermochronometer cooling histories, Patagonian Andes|url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.epsl.2019.01.030|journal=Earth and Planetary Science Letters|volume=511|pages=164–176|bibcode=2019E&PSL.511..164G|doi=10.1016/j.epsl.2019.01.030|issn=0012-821X|s2cid=135231683}}</ref> The ridge segment between [[Taitao Peninsula|Taitao]] and Darwin transform faults are currently located near the Chile Trench and collide with the South American plate.<ref name=":9" /><ref name=":1" /> |
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⚫ | The presence of slab window underneath southern South America Plate has been proven by the research which aims at determining the lithosphere and upper mantle structure proximate to the Chile Ridge.<ref name=":1" /> An [[Intraplate earthquake|intraplate]] [[seismic gap]] is recorded which coincides with the Patagonian slab window location.<ref name=":12" /><ref name=":4" /> The experimental results of the [[P |
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⚫ | The presence of slab window underneath southern South America Plate has been proven by the research which aims at determining the lithosphere and upper mantle structure proximate to the Chile Ridge.<ref name=":1" /> An [[Intraplate earthquake|intraplate]] [[seismic gap]] is recorded which coincides with the Patagonian slab window location.<ref name=":12" /><ref name=":4" /> The experimental results of the [[P wave]] travel-time [[tomography]] show there is low-velocity zone in the predicted slab window location, migrating eastward with increasing depth.<ref name=":1" /> [[File:Slabwindowmapviewver.png|thumb|upright=1.8|Fig-6 This figure shows the '''[[slab window]] caused by the [[subduction]] of Chile ridge''', slab window also brings about a [[seismic gap]]. The black lines are [[Fault (geology)|fault zones]] (FZ) and the red lines are Chile ridge segments. The dark blue spot is the [[Chile triple junction]] (CTJ).<ref name=":0">{{Cite journal|last1=De Pascale|first1=Gregory P.|last2=Froude|first2=Melanie|last3=Penna|first3=Ivanna|last4=Hermanns|first4=Reginald L.|last5=Sepúlveda|first5=Sergio A.|last6=Moncada|first6=Daniel|last7=Persico|first7=Mario|last8=Easton|first8=Gabriel|last9=Villalobos|first9=Angelo|last10=Gutiérrez|first10=Francisco|date=2021-03-29|title=Liquiñe-Ofqui's fast slipping intra-volcanic arc crustal faulting above the subducted Chile Ridge|journal=Scientific Reports|volume=11|issue=1|page=7069|doi=10.1038/s41598-021-86413-w|issn=2045-2322|pmc=8007613|pmid=33782456|bibcode=2021NatSR..11.7069D}}</ref><ref name=":12" /> The purple area reveals the Chiloe Microplate and Liquine-Ofqui fault zone is located between the Chiloe Microplate and the main South American plate.<ref name=":12">{{Cite journal|last1=Suárez|first1=Rodrigo|last2=Sue|first2=Christian|last3=Ghiglione|first3=Matías|last4=Guillaume|first4=Benjamin|last5=Ramos|first5=Miguel|last6=Martinod|first6=Joseph|last7=Barberón|first7=Vanesa|date=August 2021|title=Seismotectonic implications of the South Chile ridge subduction beneath the Patagonian Andes|url=https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/ter.12521|journal=Terra Nova|volume=33|issue=4|pages=364–374|doi=10.1111/ter.12521|bibcode=2021TeNov..33..364S|s2cid=233929593|issn=0954-4879}}</ref><ref name=":0" />]] |
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⚫ | |||
⚫ | Other than the generation of the slab window, the Chile Ridge subduction into the [[Chile |
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⚫ | |||
=== Chile Triple Junction === |
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⚫ | Other than the generation of the slab window, the Chile Ridge subduction into the [[Chile triple junction]] also influences the [[Taitao Peninsula]]. First of all is the [[Subduction erosion|tectonic erosion]], [[Neogene]] [[basalt]]ic volcanism and [[tectonic uplift]] in Late Cretaceous.<ref name=":5" /> Obduction and thrusting of Nazca plate produced due to the convergence of the overriding South America Plate and the Chile ridge, causing low-pressure metamorphism, facilitated the [[Methods of pluton emplacement|emplacement]] of [[Ophiolite|ophiolite complex]].<ref name=":2">{{Cite journal|last1=Agurto-Detzel|first1=Hans|last2=Rietbrock|first2=Andreas|last3=Bataille|first3=Klaus|last4=Miller|first4=Matthew|last5=Iwamori|first5=Hikaru|last6=Priestley|first6=Keith|date=April 2014|title=Seismicity distribution in the vicinity of the Chile triple junction, Aysén Region, southern Chile|url=http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jsames.2013.12.011|journal=Journal of South American Earth Sciences|volume=51|pages=1–11|doi=10.1016/j.jsames.2013.12.011|bibcode=2014JSAES..51....1A|issn=0895-9811}}</ref><ref name=":8" /> |
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⚫ | The [[Chile |
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=== |
=== Chile triple junction === |
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⚫ | The [[Chile triple junction]] is the intersection of Nazca, Antarctica and South American plate. The position of the junction shifts over time, and depends whether the spreading ridge subducts or the transform fault subducts beneath the South American plate. When the spreading ridge subducts, the triple junction shifts northwards; but if the fracture zone subducts, the triple junction shifts southwards.<ref name=":9" /> The junction has shifted to the north starting from the onset of Chile Ridge subduction since 17 Ma after the rupture of the [[Phoenix plate|Nazca-Antarctic-Phoenix]] triple junction.<ref name=":5" /> Since then, the Chile triple junction has arrived to its current position in the western [[Taitao Peninsula]].<ref name=":12" /> Prior to 10 Ma, Chile triple junction reaches the southern Taitao peninsula. Currently, the temperature of Chile triple junction below the depth of 10 – 20 km is predicted to be 800 – 900 °C.<ref name=":3">{{Cite journal|last1=ANMA|first1=RYO|last2=ORIHASHI|first2=YUJI|date=2013-04-20|title=Shallow-depth melt eduction due to ridge subduction: LA-ICPMS U-Pb igneous and detrital zircon ages from the Chile Triple Junction and the Taitao Peninsula, Chilean Patagonia|journal=Geochemical Journal|volume=47|issue=2|pages=149–165|doi=10.2343/geochemj.2.0243|bibcode=2013GeocJ..47..149A|issn=0016-7002|doi-access=free}}</ref><ref name=":2" /> |
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=== Ridge axes === |
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The ridge axes are the middle part of the ridge where newer crusts are formed. The central ridge axis of Chile Ridge is trending in the direction of north-northwest (NNE). Ridge axes are also known as [[Topography|topographic]] axial [[rift valley]]s. With the help of [[satellite]] [[Altimeter|altimetry]] data and [[Magnetism|magnetic]] data, gravity lows are discovered near the ridge axes.<ref name=":9" /> |
The ridge axes are the middle part of the ridge where newer crusts are formed. The central ridge axis of Chile Ridge is trending in the direction of north-northwest (NNE). Ridge axes are also known as [[Topography|topographic]] axial [[rift valley]]s. With the help of [[satellite]] [[Altimeter|altimetry]] data and [[Magnetism|magnetic]] data, gravity lows are discovered near the ridge axes.<ref name=":9" /> |
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=== Fracture |
=== Fracture zones === |
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[[File:Chile ridge fz segments.png|thumb|upright=1.6|Fig-7 This picture shows the several segments of Chile ridge which is divided by '''numerous transform fault zones'''. The segment numbers are shown in red words next to the ridge segments. The [https://www.researchgate.net/publication/253651964_Morphology_and_geology_of_the_continental_shelf_and_upper_slope_of_southern_Central_Chile_33S-43S/figures?lo=1 Chiloe Microplate] is located at the east of the Chile ridge and the [[Liquiñe-Ofqui Fault|Liquine-Ofqui fault zone]] is located between the Chiloe Microplate and the main South American |
[[File:Chile ridge fz segments.png|thumb|upright=1.6|Fig-7 This picture shows the several segments of Chile ridge which is divided by '''numerous transform fault zones'''. The segment numbers are shown in red words next to the ridge segments. The [https://www.researchgate.net/publication/253651964_Morphology_and_geology_of_the_continental_shelf_and_upper_slope_of_southern_Central_Chile_33S-43S/figures?lo=1 Chiloe Microplate] is located at the east of the Chile ridge and the [[Liquiñe-Ofqui Fault|Liquine-Ofqui fault zone]] is located between the Chiloe Microplate and the main South American plate.<ref name=":10" /> Figure made with GeoMapApp (www.geomapapp.org)]] |
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It is also named as [[Fault (geology)|fault zones]]. They are the [[transform fault]]s and separate the Chile Ridge into segments |
It is also named as [[Fault (geology)|fault zones]]. They are the [[transform fault]]s and separate the Chile Ridge into segments, causing the entire ridge axis to trend southeastward.<ref name=":10" /><ref name=":9" /> [[Fracture zone]]s are trending east-northeast (ENE). The total length of the Chile ridge axis offset is 1380 km caused by the 18 fault zones, among the fault zones, there are also 2 complex fault systems. The longest fault zones are Chiloe fault with 234 km long, and Guafo fault being the shortest (39 km).<ref name=":10" /> Through various research on the magnetic and [[bathymetry]] data, fracture zones' locations are located. While major fault zones are surveyed by the bathymetry method and defined as troughs. Same bathymetry data also discovered the Fault zones in [[East Pacific Rise]] as well as the low-velocity-spreading [[Mid-Atlantic Ridge|Mid-Atlantic ridge]].<ref name=":9" /><ref name=":4" /><ref name=":10" /> |
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==== Segmentation of Chile Ridge ==== |
==== Segmentation of Chile Ridge ==== |
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Chile Ridge is divided into a wide range of several short spreading segments which have different lengths and offset distances, in the following section, 7 segments will be discussed.<ref name=":10" /><ref name=":9" /> From the table below, it reveals that the spreading ridge segments range in length from about 20 to 200 km, the offsets within segments are about 10 to 1100 km. There are actually a total of 10 first-order ridge segments in the northern ridge (N1-N10), 5 first-order ridge segments (V1-V5) in [[Valdivia |
Chile Ridge is divided into a wide range of several short spreading segments which have different lengths and offset distances, in the following section, 7 segments will be discussed.<ref name=":10" /><ref name=":9" /> From the table below, it reveals that the spreading ridge segments range in length from about 20 to 200 km, the offsets within segments are about 10 to 1100 km. There are actually a total of 10 first-order ridge segments in the northern ridge (N1-N10), 5 first-order ridge segments (V1-V5) in [[Valdivia fracture zone]], 5 first-order ridge segments (S1-S5) are in the southern ridge. Moreover, both segments N9 and S5 are divided into two parts by non-transform offsets. The table above summarized the longer, more regular and less complicated faults: N1, N5, N8, N9N, N9S, N10, V4, S5N, and S5S. |
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[[File:Bathymetry (1).png|thumb|upright=1.6|Fig-8 The contour lines show the '''hourglass morphology of one of the segments of the Chile Ridge.''' Below is the cross-section of the Chile Ridge topography.<ref name=":10" />]] |
[[File:Bathymetry (1).png|thumb|upright=1.6|Fig-8 The contour lines show the '''hourglass morphology of one of the segments of the Chile Ridge.''' Below is the cross-section of the Chile Ridge topography.<ref name=":10" />]] |
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Line 165: | Line 167: | ||
Deep [[Contour line|contours]] are located along the segment ends while shallow contours are located at the segment center. The segment center is narrower as the while the axial valley located at the segment ends are wider. This forms an hourglass morphology. (Fig-8)<ref name=":10" /> |
Deep [[Contour line|contours]] are located along the segment ends while shallow contours are located at the segment center. The segment center is narrower as the while the axial valley located at the segment ends are wider. This forms an hourglass morphology. (Fig-8)<ref name=":10" /> |
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===== Valdivia |
===== Valdivia fracture zone ===== |
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{{main|Valdivia |
{{main|Valdivia fracture zone}} |
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It is located in the middle of the Chile ridge (Fig-1, 2, 7), and separates the ridge into northern and southern sections, discovered by the |
It is located in the middle of the Chile ridge (Fig-1, 2, 7), and separates the ridge into northern and southern sections, discovered by the bathymetry and magnetic profiles study, as well as the gravity anomaly detection.<ref name=":8" /> The Valdivia Fault Zone has caused the offset of the north and south Chile ridge for more than 600 km in the E-W direction. There are six fault zones between the Valdivia Fault Zone.<ref name=":9" /> |
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{| class="wikitable" |
{| class="wikitable" |
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|+Summary of the segments of Chile Ridge (Fig-7) |
|+Summary of the segments of Chile Ridge (Fig-7)<ref name=":10" /><ref name=":9" /> |
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!Name of the segment |
!Name of the segment |
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!Length (km) |
!Length (km) |
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Line 180: | Line 182: | ||
|70 |
|70 |
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|First-order |
|First-order |
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|Northernmost; Bounded by 1000 km-long [[Transform fault|transform fault zones]] in both north and |
|Northernmost; Bounded by 1000 km-long [[Transform fault|transform fault zones]] in both north and south |
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|Asymmetric [[hourglass]], |
|Asymmetric [[hourglass]], |
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Line 218: | Line 220: | ||
|95 |
|95 |
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|First-order |
|First-order |
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|Offset west of N9 for 25 km, bounded by a transform fault that offsets west of N9 in the north, and [[ |
|Offset west of N9 for 25 km, bounded by a transform fault that offsets west of N9 in the north, and [[Valdivia fracture zone]] in the south which offset 600 km in E-W direction |
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|Hourglass (decrease in relief towards the spreading center, i.e. middle of the ridge segment) |
|Hourglass (decrease in relief towards the spreading center, i.e. middle of the ridge segment) |
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Line 247: | Line 249: | ||
== Interaction between Chile Ridge and Chile Trench == |
== Interaction between Chile Ridge and Chile Trench == |
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[[Geophysics|Geophysical]] and [[Geothermal gradient|geothermal]] analysis in the southern Chile |
[[Geophysics|Geophysical]] and [[Geothermal gradient|geothermal]] analysis in the southern Chile triple junction has been examined. [[Magnetism|Magnetic]] and [[Bathymetry|bathymetric]] data have been recorded across the Chile Ridge which recognizes a slight transformation in the configuration of the spreading ridge when the ridge converges with the trench.<ref name=":2" /><ref name=":4" /><ref name=":12" /> |
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The overriding South America Plate is dominantly impacted by the ridge collision. The Chile-Peru Trench becomes steeper and narrower when the Chile Ridge is subducting.<ref name=":4" /> Chile Ridge segment within the Taitao [[ |
The overriding South America Plate is dominantly impacted by the ridge collision. The Chile-Peru Trench becomes steeper and narrower when the Chile Ridge is subducting.<ref name=":4" /> Chile Ridge segment within the Taitao [[fracture zone]] collides with the southern end of the trench. The collision of the ridge may also be associated with the [[obduction]] process onto the landward trench slope. Geothermal data along the southern triple junction are measured. The [[heat flow]] analysis in the collision zone of the trench indicated a high value of heat pulse (345 mW/m<sup>2</sup>) related to the Chile ridge subduction in the lower part of the trench.<ref name=":4" /> Furthermore, by the application of bottom-simulating reflectors (BSR), more convincing evidence of the existence of high heat flow underneath the [[Oceanic trench|trench slope]], as a wider range of heat flow observations grid is shown from the north to the south of the triple junction.<ref name=":4" /> Also, the hypothesized conductive heat flow is consistent with the heat flow data from BSR.<ref name=":4" /><ref name=":14" /> |
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== Importance of the spreading ridge subduction == |
== Importance of the spreading ridge subduction == |
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Understanding the spreading ridge subduction is crucial as it controls the evolution of continental crust. The subduction of the Chile Ridge beneath the Chile Trench provides a suitable analog for the initiation of the Archean continental crust via the melting of deep oceanic crust.<ref name=":8" /> This is because the Chile Ridge subduction is the only example in the world that the overriding plate is a continental one. The correlations between the rocks in the past can also be examined. The ridge trench interaction can also be studied.<ref name=":8" /> |
Understanding the spreading ridge subduction is crucial as it controls the evolution of continental crust. The subduction of the Chile Ridge beneath the Chile Trench provides a suitable analog for the initiation of the Archean continental crust via the melting of deep oceanic crust.<ref name=":8" /> This is because the Chile Ridge subduction is the only example in the world that the overriding plate is a continental one. The correlations between the rocks in the past can also be examined. The ridge trench interaction can also be studied.<ref name=":8" /> |
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In addition, due to the presence of Patagonian slab window and the obduction of the Nazca plate, the geological process that happened |
In addition, due to the presence of the Patagonian slab window and the obduction of the Nazca plate, the geological process that happened historically are not the same.<ref name=":8" /> Therefore, the Chile Ridge subduction is not conformable with the [[Uniformitarianism|uniformitarian principle]] (geological process happened now is the same with that in the past).<ref>{{Cite web|date=2020-01-27|title=Uniformitarianism|url=http://www.nationalgeographic.org/encyclopedia/uniformitarianism/|access-date=2021-11-12|publisher=National Geographic Society}}</ref> |
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=== Other example of spreading ridge subduction === |
=== Other example of spreading ridge subduction === |
Latest revision as of 12:25, 30 December 2024
The Chile Ridge, also known as the Chile Rise, is a submarine oceanic ridge formed by the divergent plate boundary between the Nazca plate and the Antarctic plate. It extends from the triple junction of the Nazca, Pacific, and Antarctic plates to the Southern coast of Chile.[1][2] The Chile Ridge is easy to recognize on the map, as the ridge is divided into several segmented fracture zones which are perpendicular to the ridge segments, showing an orthogonal shape toward the spreading direction. The total length of the ridge segments is about 550–600 km (340–370 mi; 300–320 nmi).[1]
The continuously spreading Chile Ridge collides with the southern South American plate to the east, and the ridge has been subducting underneath the Taitao Peninsula since 14 million years ago (Ma).[1][2] The ridge-collision has generated a slab window beneath the overlying South America Plate, with smaller volume of upper mantle magma melt, proven by an abrupt low velocity of magma flow rate below the separating Chile ridge.[2][1][3] The subduction generates a special type of igneous rocks, represented by the Taitao ophiolites, which is an ultramafic rock composed of olivine and pyroxene, usually found in oceanic plates.[4][2] In addition, the subduction of the Chile Ridge also creates Taitao granite in Taitao Peninsula which appeared as plutons.[2][5]
The Chile Ridge involves spreading ridge subduction which is worth studying because it explains how the Archean continental crust initiation formed from deep oceanic crust.[4]
History
[edit]From approximately 14 to 3 million years ago, a series of trenches collided the Chile Trench, forming what is part of the Chile Ridge.[citation needed]
In the 2010 Concepcion earthquake (magnitude 8.8) struck the ridge.[citation needed]
Regional geology
[edit]Geology of the Chile ridge
[edit]The geology of the Chile ridge is closely related to the geology of the Taitao Peninsula (East of the Chile ridge). This is because the Chile ridge subducts beneath the Taitao Peninsula, which give rise to unique lithologies there.[4][5] The lithological units would be discussed from youngest to oldest, and Taitao Granites and Taitao Ophiolite would be our main focus.
Taitao Granites (Adakite-like rocks in Late-Miocene)
[edit]Adakite magmatism is formed by the melting of the Nazca plate's trailing edge.[2] Due to the subduction of the Chile Ridge beneath the South American plate, there were intrusive magmatism which generates granite.[4] This is also formed by the partial melting of the subducted oceanic crust.[4][5] The young Nazca crust (less than 18 Myr old) are warmer so that the metamorphosed subducted basalts are melted.[5][4] In normal mid-oceanic ridge, the presence of volatiles like water also reduces the solidus temperature.[4] However, in Chile Ridge, there is relatively low-extent (20%) of partial melting of the lithosphere, the pressure and the temperature of the partial melting is less than 10 kbar and higher than 650° respectively.[4] This is because the warm young Nazca plate has hindered high rate of cooling and dehydration. The partial melting of the Taitao granite creates plutons like the Cabo Raper adakitic pluton.[4]
Characteristics of Taitao Granites
[edit]Adakite is a felsic to intermediate rock and are usually calc-alkaline in composition. It is also silica-rich.[2] The partial melting causes the alteration of the subducted basalts into eclogite and amphibolite which contains garnet.[4]
Taitao Ophiolite (pillow lava, sheeted dikes, gabbro, ultramafic rocks in Late-Miocene)
[edit]Along the axis in the Chile ridge, magmatic rocks which are mafic to ultramafic are emplaced.[4] For instance, the Taitao ophiolite complex is discovered in the westernmost of the Taitao Peninsula (east of the Chile Ridge), about 50 km southeast of the Chile triple junction. This is contributed by the obduction of the Nazca plate produced due to the convergence of the overriding South America Plate and the Chile ridge Tres Montes segment.[2][7] The obduction and the thrusting causes low-pressure metamorphism and forms the ophiolite complex. This metamorphism indicates the onset of hydrothermal alteration in a spreading ridge environment.[4][7] There are also recent activities of acidic magmas in the Taitao Peninsula which allows the comparison between the past composition and current composition, history of the magma can be determined.[2][8]
Characteristics of Taitao Ophiolite
[edit]Taitao ophiolite lithosphere forms a special sequence from the top to bottom: pillow lavas, sheeted dike complex, gabbros and ultramafic rock units. For the ultramafic rock units, it proved that there are at least two melting events that happened before.[2][9]
The thermal configuration and the structure of the subduction zone affects the interactions of the oceanic lithosphere, seafloor sediments, the eroded rock from the overlying South American plate, and the sub-arc mantle wedge as well as the chemical composition of the magma, that melts from the mantle.[2] Due to the subduction of oceanic ridges (Chile Ridge) beneath the South American plate which has occurred since 16 Ma, this caused the alteration in the thermal configuration and the geometry of the sub-arc mantle wedge, creating a distinct chemical composition of magma generations.[2] That means by understanding the composition of the magma, specific conditions of subduction systems can be known.[2] This has found that the slab window produced by the subduction of the ridge causes the generation of alkali basalt. The ridge-trench convergence and slab window generation aids the emplacement of the alkaline basalts.[2][6]
Age of the rocks | Kinds of magmatism | Rock type | Subduction settings | Composition |
---|---|---|---|---|
Holocene | / | Conglomerate | / | Variable compositions: rock fragments from Taitao granites, ophiolite, |
Late-Miocene (3.92 Ma, 5.12 Ma) | Arc magmatism | Taitao Granites | low-extent partial melting of the altered basalt (from the trailing edge of Nazca plate) in a hot subduction event beneath the volcanic arc | intermediate to felsic, calc-alkaline, adakites: high Sr/Y and La/Yb ratio |
Late-Miocene
(5.19 Ma) |
Arc magmatism | Taitao Ophiolite | obduction and uplift of the Nazca plate produced due to the convergence of the overriding South America Plate and the Chile ridge, causing low-pressure metamorphism | mafic to ultramafic, olivine and pyroxene |
Pre-Jurassic | / | Meta-sedimenary basement | / | / |
Bathymetry
[edit]Bathymetry of the Chile ridge is inspected, which is the submarine topography that studies the depths of landforms under the water level.[10] It is discovered that there are large abyssal hills extend along two sides of the ridge. The abyssal hills grow cyclically which is caused by the cyclic fault growth. During faulting cycles, the extension of the Chile ridge brought about 'diffusion' tectonic deformation which forms numerous tiny faults. The continuous divergence of the ridge causes the extensional strain to concentrate, the tiny faults to link together to generate tall and long abyssal-hill-scale faults. The huge faults push the old and inactive faults away from the ridge axis by extensional force. This process would repeat again. Therefore, the further the abyssal hill to the ridge axis, the older the age it is.[9]
The Chile Ridge movement
[edit]The spreading of the Chile Ridge
[edit]The Chile Ridge is formed by the divergence of the Nazca and Antarctica plates.[4] It is spreading actively at the rate of about 6.4 – 7.0 cm/year since 5 Ma to present.[4] The Late Miocene Nazca-Antarctic spreading ridge formation creates about 550 km-long Chile Ridge as there are differences in the convergence rates between Nazca and Antarctica plates.[2] According to the results from space geodetic observations, Nazca-South America converges four times faster than that of Antarctica-South America.[1][9]
In addition, the direction of the Nazca plate migration is different from the Antarctica plate migration since 3 Ma. The direction that Nazca plate moves is ENE, while the Antarctic plate is ESE. The net diverging movement of the two plates contributes to the spreading of the Chile Ridge.[4]
Name of the Plate | Direction of movement | Rate of movement |
---|---|---|
Nazca plate | N77°E (ENE) | 6.6–8.5 cm/year |
Antarctica plate | N100°E (ESE) | 1.85 cm/year |
Migration and subduction of the Chile ridge
[edit]The subduction of the ridge started is an oblique subduction with 10° – 12° oblique to the Chile trench since 14 Ma,[4] which subducts beneath the southeastern Southern Patagonia.[1][4] Thus it is found that both the Nazca-South American plate collision and Antarctic-South American plate collision have been taken place at the same time when the Chile ridge is separating, i.e. segments of Chile Ridge have been subducting beneath the South American plate.[1] Due to the difference in the convergence rate, the formation of a slab window is favoured.[1] Slab window is a gap underneath the South America Plate, where the overriding South America Plate has only little lithospheric mantle supporting it and is directly exposed to the hot asthenospheric mantle.[1]
The experimental results from the magnetic anomalies within the oceanic crust suggest that about in 14–10 Ma (late-Miocene), some of the Chile Ridge segments were subducted beneath the Southern Patagonian Peninsula (located between 48° and 54°S) subsequently.[2] From 10 Ma to the present, Chile Ridge was separated into several short segments by the fracture zones, and the segments of the ridge are subducted between 46° and 48° S.[2][1] The above findings have proven that Chile Ridge has been encountered a northward migration.[2][9][4] Thus it has been found that the spreading rate of Chile Ridge from 23 Ma to the present has slowed down. While the spreading rate of the ridge is correlated to time of the collisions of ridge and trench.[1] Some studies have different discoveries in the rate of spreading which shows that the ridge may have spread uniformly for about 31 km/Myr half spreading rate starting from 5.9 Ma.[9]
Associated seismicity
[edit]In the Chile Ridge Subduction Project (CRSP), seismic stations are deployed in the Chile triple junction (CTJ).[12] The tectonic activity and seismicity are mainly driven by the subduction of Chile Ridge.[13] A slab window is formed as the Nazca and Antarctica Plate continues to diverge when colliding with Chile trench, a gap is created as new lithosphere production is becomes very slow.[14][3][15] Moderate to high offshore seismicities for magnitude higher than 4 is detected in the segmented Chile Ridge as well as the transform faults.[12] It is predicted that the subduction of the spreading Chile Ridge under South America to the north of the Chile triple junction give rise to the seismic events. Furthermore, intraplate seismicity in the overriding South American plate is more likely resulted from the deformation of the Liquiñe-Ofqui fault system.[14][13][16]
Chiloe microplate
[edit]This is a tiny plate between Nazca plate and South American plate, it locates east of the Chile ridge. It is proved that Chiloe microplate (Fig-5, 6) is migrated northwards relative to the South American plate which is rather immobile. The Golfo de Penas basin is formed because of the northward movement of Chiloe microplate.[16]
Seismicity of Liquiñe-Ofqui fault system in the Aysén Region
[edit]The Liquiñe-Ofqui fault system is a right-lateral strike-slip fault separating Chiloe Microplate and the South America Plate.[13] The northward migration of Chiloe Microplate along the Liquiñe-Ofqui fault creates the Golfo de Penas basin in the late Miocene period.[16]
The Liquiñe-Ofqui fault is a fast-slipping fault (with a geodetic rate of 6.8–28 mm/yr).[16] Intraplate seismicity has mainly been taken place in this fault system. Also, enormous stress from the Nazca plates and South American plate collision has accumulated along the fault system.[16][13] Throughout history, only limited seismic studies have been conducted in the Aysén Region, southern Chile. There is only an event of seismic magnitude higher than 7 happening in 1927.[13] This hinders the finding in seismicity near the Chile Ridge. Nevertheless, in 2007, the Liquiñe-Ofqui fault system releases the accumulated stress brought by the subduction of Nazca underneath the South America Plate with seismicity magnitude reaching 7 in an earthquake.[16] Recently, 274 seismic events have been detected in 2004–2005.[16]
Seismicity of the Patagonian slab window
[edit]There is an intraplate seismicity gap between 47° and 50°S (area with abnormal high heat flow), which coincides with the Patagonian slab window, disrupting most seismic events. The local seismic data only reveals a low-magnitude (magnitude lower than 3.4) seismic event, which is not related to tectonic process. The reason behind this is that the Antarctica Plate undergoes shallow subduction which causes very limited seismic deformation.[16][14] (Fig-5)
Regions | where the seismicity is concentrated | depth of focus (km) | magnitude of seismic event | Orientation of the maximum compressional stress |
---|---|---|---|---|
North of the Chile triple junction | intraplate seismic events concentrated along Liquiñe-Ofqui fault system | 4–21 | 1.5–6 | ENE–WSW (oblique to the continental margin of South American plate of N10°) |
South of the Chile triple junction (between 46.5°-50°S) | seismic events sparsely populated in Southern Patagon | 12–15 | 5 | ESE–WNW |
Geological formation related to the Chile Ridge movement
[edit]Consequence of the subduction of the Chile Ridge
[edit]Patagonia slab window
[edit]The most obvious impact of the subduction of the Chile ridge is the formation of slab window. It is formed when the segments of separating Chile Ridge subducts under the southern South America Plate. The trailing edge of the Nazca plate is completely melted in the subduction zone, and the leading edge of the Antarctic plate diverges, a widening gap is created between the two plates as very little crust is melted after subduction. In this case, only a very little amount of magma is produced underneath the slab window.[3] The mantle in the slab window is rather hotter than the mantle that melts from the lithospheric crust, and the generation of magma is very slow. This is due to low-extent of hydration to the subduction zone, decreasing mantle convection velocity, as the production of magma in the subduction zone is mainly driven by the hydration that lowers the partial melting of the crust. A volcanic arc gap is formed above the slab window as the magma melted from the crust convects slowly which hampers the volcanism.[15][1][2][17] The ridge segment between Taitao and Darwin transform faults are currently located near the Chile Trench and collide with the South American plate.[1][3]
The presence of slab window underneath southern South America Plate has been proven by the research which aims at determining the lithosphere and upper mantle structure proximate to the Chile Ridge.[3] An intraplate seismic gap is recorded which coincides with the Patagonian slab window location.[14][8] The experimental results of the P wave travel-time tomography show there is low-velocity zone in the predicted slab window location, migrating eastward with increasing depth.[3]
Tectonic erosion and emplacement of ophiolite
[edit]Other than the generation of the slab window, the Chile Ridge subduction into the Chile triple junction also influences the Taitao Peninsula. First of all is the tectonic erosion, Neogene basaltic volcanism and tectonic uplift in Late Cretaceous.[2] Obduction and thrusting of Nazca plate produced due to the convergence of the overriding South America Plate and the Chile ridge, causing low-pressure metamorphism, facilitated the emplacement of ophiolite complex.[13][4]
Chile triple junction
[edit]The Chile triple junction is the intersection of Nazca, Antarctica and South American plate. The position of the junction shifts over time, and depends whether the spreading ridge subducts or the transform fault subducts beneath the South American plate. When the spreading ridge subducts, the triple junction shifts northwards; but if the fracture zone subducts, the triple junction shifts southwards.[1] The junction has shifted to the north starting from the onset of Chile Ridge subduction since 17 Ma after the rupture of the Nazca-Antarctic-Phoenix triple junction.[2] Since then, the Chile triple junction has arrived to its current position in the western Taitao Peninsula.[14] Prior to 10 Ma, Chile triple junction reaches the southern Taitao peninsula. Currently, the temperature of Chile triple junction below the depth of 10 – 20 km is predicted to be 800 – 900 °C.[18][13]
Ridge axes
[edit]The ridge axes are the middle part of the ridge where newer crusts are formed. The central ridge axis of Chile Ridge is trending in the direction of north-northwest (NNE). Ridge axes are also known as topographic axial rift valleys. With the help of satellite altimetry data and magnetic data, gravity lows are discovered near the ridge axes.[1]
Fracture zones
[edit]It is also named as fault zones. They are the transform faults and separate the Chile Ridge into segments, causing the entire ridge axis to trend southeastward.[9][1] Fracture zones are trending east-northeast (ENE). The total length of the Chile ridge axis offset is 1380 km caused by the 18 fault zones, among the fault zones, there are also 2 complex fault systems. The longest fault zones are Chiloe fault with 234 km long, and Guafo fault being the shortest (39 km).[9] Through various research on the magnetic and bathymetry data, fracture zones' locations are located. While major fault zones are surveyed by the bathymetry method and defined as troughs. Same bathymetry data also discovered the Fault zones in East Pacific Rise as well as the low-velocity-spreading Mid-Atlantic ridge.[1][8][9]
Segmentation of Chile Ridge
[edit]Chile Ridge is divided into a wide range of several short spreading segments which have different lengths and offset distances, in the following section, 7 segments will be discussed.[9][1] From the table below, it reveals that the spreading ridge segments range in length from about 20 to 200 km, the offsets within segments are about 10 to 1100 km. There are actually a total of 10 first-order ridge segments in the northern ridge (N1-N10), 5 first-order ridge segments (V1-V5) in Valdivia fracture zone, 5 first-order ridge segments (S1-S5) are in the southern ridge. Moreover, both segments N9 and S5 are divided into two parts by non-transform offsets. The table above summarized the longer, more regular and less complicated faults: N1, N5, N8, N9N, N9S, N10, V4, S5N, and S5S.
Hourglass morphology
[edit]Deep contours are located along the segment ends while shallow contours are located at the segment center. The segment center is narrower as the while the axial valley located at the segment ends are wider. This forms an hourglass morphology. (Fig-8)[9]
Valdivia fracture zone
[edit]It is located in the middle of the Chile ridge (Fig-1, 2, 7), and separates the ridge into northern and southern sections, discovered by the bathymetry and magnetic profiles study, as well as the gravity anomaly detection.[4] The Valdivia Fault Zone has caused the offset of the north and south Chile ridge for more than 600 km in the E-W direction. There are six fault zones between the Valdivia Fault Zone.[1]
Name of the segment | Length (km) | Number of orders (No. of hourglass) | Location relative to the Chile Ridge | Morphology |
---|---|---|---|---|
N1 | 70 | First-order | Northernmost; Bounded by 1000 km-long transform fault zones in both north and south | Asymmetric hourglass,
Ridge-parallel abyssal hills present on both sides of the axial valley |
N5 | 95 | First-order | Offset east of N1 for 250 km; Bounded by 'pseudofaults' between the southern end of N5 and the northern end of N6, which offset 20 km east | Asymmetric hourglass (located in short volcanic chains) |
N8 | 65 | First-order | Offset east of N9 for 80 km, bounded by a transform fault in N7 in the north, and a transform fault with offset N9 80 km | More obvious hourglass (deeper segment center, local minimum is at the shallowest part of the segment) |
N9 | 140 | Second-order (N9N and N9S) | Offset east of N8 for 80 km, and offset east of N10 for 25 km, N9 are broken into two parts by a non-transform offset (N9N and N9S), bound by the transform offset in the north and a transform offset N9 by 80 km in the south | |
N9N | 110 | Bound in the south by NTO which offset east of N9S 8 km | Two obvious hourglasses (deep, wide axial valley) | |
N9S | 30 | Semi-hourglass (shallow hourglass structure) | ||
N10 | 95 | First-order | Offset west of N9 for 25 km, bounded by a transform fault that offsets west of N9 in the north, and Valdivia fracture zone in the south which offset 600 km in E-W direction | Hourglass (decrease in relief towards the spreading center, i.e. middle of the ridge segment) |
V4 | 20 | First-order | In the Valdivia Fracture zone, bounded by N10 and S5 transform fault segments in the north and south, segment lengths are very short | / |
S5 | 115 | Second-order (S5N and S5S) | Bounded by Valdivia Fracture Zone transform fault in the north, and a transform fault in the south that offset next segment 60 km eastward | Hourglass |
S5N | 70 | Hourglass | ||
S5S | 45 | More obvious hourglass (inside corner of southern section is more shallow than the outside corner) |
Interaction between Chile Ridge and Chile Trench
[edit]Geophysical and geothermal analysis in the southern Chile triple junction has been examined. Magnetic and bathymetric data have been recorded across the Chile Ridge which recognizes a slight transformation in the configuration of the spreading ridge when the ridge converges with the trench.[13][8][14]
The overriding South America Plate is dominantly impacted by the ridge collision. The Chile-Peru Trench becomes steeper and narrower when the Chile Ridge is subducting.[8] Chile Ridge segment within the Taitao fracture zone collides with the southern end of the trench. The collision of the ridge may also be associated with the obduction process onto the landward trench slope. Geothermal data along the southern triple junction are measured. The heat flow analysis in the collision zone of the trench indicated a high value of heat pulse (345 mW/m2) related to the Chile ridge subduction in the lower part of the trench.[8] Furthermore, by the application of bottom-simulating reflectors (BSR), more convincing evidence of the existence of high heat flow underneath the trench slope, as a wider range of heat flow observations grid is shown from the north to the south of the triple junction.[8] Also, the hypothesized conductive heat flow is consistent with the heat flow data from BSR.[8][12]
Importance of the spreading ridge subduction
[edit]Understanding the spreading ridge subduction is crucial as it controls the evolution of continental crust. The subduction of the Chile Ridge beneath the Chile Trench provides a suitable analog for the initiation of the Archean continental crust via the melting of deep oceanic crust.[4] This is because the Chile Ridge subduction is the only example in the world that the overriding plate is a continental one. The correlations between the rocks in the past can also be examined. The ridge trench interaction can also be studied.[4]
In addition, due to the presence of the Patagonian slab window and the obduction of the Nazca plate, the geological process that happened historically are not the same.[4] Therefore, the Chile Ridge subduction is not conformable with the uniformitarian principle (geological process happened now is the same with that in the past).[19]
Other example of spreading ridge subduction
[edit]The Kula-Farallon/Resurrection ridge subduction
[edit]The subduction of Kula-Farallon/Resurrection ridge started during Late Cretaceous-Paleocene, this is currently located at the Chugach complex, Alaska where mafic-ultramafic high grade metamorphism is found nowadays.[4] The ridge subduction controls the magmatism of the North American boundary.[4]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v Tebbens, S. F.; Cande, S. C.; Kovacs, L.; Parra, J. C.; LaBrecque, J. L.; Vergara, H. (1997-06-10). "The Chile ridge: A tectonic framework". Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth. 102 (B6): 12035–12059. Bibcode:1997JGR...10212035T. doi:10.1029/96jb02581. ISSN 0148-0227.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w Ramírez de Arellano, Cristóbal; Calderón, Mauricio; Rivera, Huber; Valenzuela, Mauricio; Fanning, C. Mark; Paredes, Eliot (October 2021). "Neogene Patagonian magmatism between the rupture of the Farallon plate and the Chile Ridge subduction". Journal of South American Earth Sciences. 110: 103238. Bibcode:2021JSAES.11003238R. doi:10.1016/j.jsames.2021.103238. ISSN 0895-9811.
- ^ a b c d e f g Russo, R.M.; VanDecar, John C.; Comte, Diana; Mocanu, Victor I.; Gallego, Alejandro; Murdie, Ruth E. (2010). "Subduction of the Chile Ridge: Upper mantle structure and flow". GSA Today: 4–10. doi:10.1130/gsatg61a.1. ISSN 1052-5173.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa Bourgois, Jacques; Lagabrielle, Yves; Martin, Hervé; Dyment, Jérôme; Frutos, Jose; Cisternas, Maria Eugenia (2016), A Review on Forearc Ophiolite Obduction, Adakite-Like Generation, and Slab Window Development at the Chile Triple Junction Area: Uniformitarian Framework for Spreading-Ridge Subduction, Pageoph Topical Volumes, Cham: Springer International Publishing, pp. 3217–3246, doi:10.1007/978-3-319-51529-8_2, ISBN 978-3-319-51528-1, retrieved 2021-11-10
- ^ a b c d e f Anma, Ryo; Armstrong, Richard; Orihashi, Yuji; Ike, Shin-ichi; Shin, Ki-Cheol; Kon, Yoshiaki; Komiya, Tsuyoshi; Ota, Tsutomu; Kagashima, Shin-ichi; Shibuya, Takazo (November 2009). "Are the Taitao granites formed due to subduction of the Chile ridge?". Lithos. 113 (1–2): 246–258. Bibcode:2009Litho.113..246A. doi:10.1016/j.lithos.2009.05.018. hdl:2241/104215. ISSN 0024-4937.
- ^ a b Veloso, Eugenio E; Anma, Ryo; Yamaji, Atsushi (January 2009). "Ophiolite Emplacement and the Effects of the Subduction of the Active Chile Ridge System: Heterogeneous Paleostress Regimes Recorded in the Taitao Ophiolite (Southern Chile)". Andean Geology. 36 (1). doi:10.4067/s0718-71062009000100002. ISSN 0718-7106.
- ^ a b Veloso, Eugenio E; Anma, Ryo; Yamaji, Atsushi (January 2009). "Ophiolite Emplacement and the Effects of the Subduction of the Active Chile Ridge System: Heterogeneous Paleostress Regimes Recorded in the Taitao Ophiolite (Southern Chile)". Andean Geology. 36 (1). doi:10.4067/s0718-71062009000100002. ISSN 0718-7106.
- ^ a b c d e f g h Cande, S. C.; Leslie, R. B.; Parra, J. C.; Hobart, M. (1987). "Interaction between the Chile Ridge and Chile Trench: Geophysical and geothermal evidence". Journal of Geophysical Research. 92 (B1): 495. Bibcode:1987JGR....92..495C. doi:10.1029/jb092ib01p00495. ISSN 0148-0227.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Howell, Samuel M.; Ito, Garrett; Behn, Mark D.; Martinez, Fernando; Olive, Jean-Arthur; Escartín, Javier (June 2016). "Magmatic and tectonic extension at the Chile Ridge: Evidence for mantle controls on ridge segmentation". Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems. 17 (6): 2354–2373. Bibcode:2016GGG....17.2354H. doi:10.1002/2016gc006380. hdl:1912/8312. ISSN 1525-2027. S2CID 53126550.
- ^ "bathymetry". National Geographic Society. 2011-03-24. Retrieved 2021-10-05.
- ^ Steel, Ron; Gloppen, Tor Gunnar (1980-09-11). "Late Caledonian (Devonian) Basin Formation, Western Norway: Signs of Strike-Slip Tectonics during Infilling". Sedimentation in Oblique-Slip Mobile Zones. pp. 79–103. doi:10.1002/9781444303735.ch6. ISBN 9780632006076.
- ^ a b c Gallego, A.; Russo, R. M.; Comte, D.; Mocanu, V. I.; Murdie, R. E.; Vandecar, J. C. (2010-07-05). "Seismic noise tomography in the Chile ridge subduction region". Geophysical Journal International. 182 (3): 1478–1492. Bibcode:2010GeoJI.182.1478G. doi:10.1111/j.1365-246x.2010.04691.x. ISSN 0956-540X.
- ^ a b c d e f g h Agurto-Detzel, Hans; Rietbrock, Andreas; Bataille, Klaus; Miller, Matthew; Iwamori, Hikaru; Priestley, Keith (April 2014). "Seismicity distribution in the vicinity of the Chile triple junction, Aysén Region, southern Chile". Journal of South American Earth Sciences. 51: 1–11. Bibcode:2014JSAES..51....1A. doi:10.1016/j.jsames.2013.12.011. ISSN 0895-9811.
- ^ a b c d e f g h Suárez, Rodrigo; Sue, Christian; Ghiglione, Matías; Guillaume, Benjamin; Ramos, Miguel; Martinod, Joseph; Barberón, Vanesa (August 2021). "Seismotectonic implications of the South Chile ridge subduction beneath the Patagonian Andes". Terra Nova. 33 (4): 364–374. Bibcode:2021TeNov..33..364S. doi:10.1111/ter.12521. ISSN 0954-4879. S2CID 233929593.
- ^ a b Elthon, Don (1991), "Experimental phase petrology of mid-ocean ridge basalts", Oceanic Basalts, Boston, MA: Springer US, pp. 94–115, doi:10.1007/978-1-4615-3540-9_6, ISBN 978-1-4613-6571-6, retrieved 2021-10-08
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k De Pascale, Gregory P.; Froude, Melanie; Penna, Ivanna; Hermanns, Reginald L.; Sepúlveda, Sergio A.; Moncada, Daniel; Persico, Mario; Easton, Gabriel; Villalobos, Angelo; Gutiérrez, Francisco (2021-03-29). "Liquiñe-Ofqui's fast slipping intra-volcanic arc crustal faulting above the subducted Chile Ridge". Scientific Reports. 11 (1): 7069. Bibcode:2021NatSR..11.7069D. doi:10.1038/s41598-021-86413-w. ISSN 2045-2322. PMC 8007613. PMID 33782456.
- ^ Georgieva, V.; Gallagher, K.; Sobczyk, A.; Sobel, E.R.; Schildgen, T.F.; Ehlers, T.A.; Strecker, M.R. (April 2019). "Effects of slab-window, alkaline volcanism, and glaciation on thermochronometer cooling histories, Patagonian Andes". Earth and Planetary Science Letters. 511: 164–176. Bibcode:2019E&PSL.511..164G. doi:10.1016/j.epsl.2019.01.030. ISSN 0012-821X. S2CID 135231683.
- ^ ANMA, RYO; ORIHASHI, YUJI (2013-04-20). "Shallow-depth melt eduction due to ridge subduction: LA-ICPMS U-Pb igneous and detrital zircon ages from the Chile Triple Junction and the Taitao Peninsula, Chilean Patagonia". Geochemical Journal. 47 (2): 149–165. Bibcode:2013GeocJ..47..149A. doi:10.2343/geochemj.2.0243. ISSN 0016-7002.
- ^ "Uniformitarianism". National Geographic Society. 2020-01-27. Retrieved 2021-11-12.