The development of the Deception Island volcano caldera under control of the Bransfield Basin sinistral strike-slip tectonic regime (NW Antarctica)
Author(s) -
Fernando Carlos Lopes,
Alberto Caselli,
A. Machado,
Teresa Barata
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
geological society london special publications
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.673
H-Index - 132
eISSN - 2041-4927
pISSN - 0305-8719
DOI - 10.1144/sp401.6
Subject(s) - sinistral and dextral , caldera , geology , volcano , seismology , transtension , structural basin , strike slip tectonics , tectonics , oceanography , paleontology
Deception Island is a small and volcanically active caldera volcano of Quaternary age, located in the marginal basin of Bransfield Strait, NW Antarctica. The distribution and orientation of fracture and fault systems that have affected the Deception volcanic edifice, and the elongated geometry of its volcanic caldera, are consistent with a model of Riedel deformation induced by a regional left-lateral simple shear zone. It is suggested that this caldera was formed above a magma chamber stretched under the influence of the regional transtensional regime with left-lateral simple shear. The collapse may have occurred in at least two phases: first, a small volume event occurred along the compressed flanks of the volcano edifice; and second, a large collapse event affected the stretched flanks of the volcano edifice.
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