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Pleistocene slip rates on the Boconó fault along the North Andean Block plate boundary, Venezuela
Author(s) -
PousseBeltran Lea,
Vassallo Riccardo,
Audemard Franck,
Jouanne François,
Carcaillet Julien,
Pathier Erwan,
Volat Matthieu
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
tectonics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.465
H-Index - 134
eISSN - 1944-9194
pISSN - 0278-7407
DOI - 10.1002/2016tc004305
Subject(s) - geology , seismology , slip (aerodynamics) , alluvial fan , quaternary , interferometric synthetic aperture radar , fault (geology) , pleistocene , plate tectonics , pleiades , geodesy , tectonics , synthetic aperture radar , paleontology , sedimentary rock , remote sensing , stars , physics , astronomy , thermodynamics
Abstract The Boconó fault is a strike‐slip fault lying between the North Andean Block and the South American plate which has triggered at least five M w > 7 historical earthquakes in Venezuela. The North Andean Block is currently moving toward NNE with respect to a stable South American plate. This relative displacement at ~12 mm yr −1 in Venezuela (within the Maracaibo Block) was measured by geodesy, but until now the distribution and rates of Quaternary deformation have remained partially unclear. We used two alluvial fans offset by the Boconó fault (Yaracuy Valley) to quantify slip rates, by combining 10 Be cosmogenic dating with measurements of tectonic displacements on high‐resolution satellite images (Pleiades). Based upon a fan dated at >79 ka and offset by 1350–1580 m and a second fan dated at 120–273 ka and offset by 1236–1500 m, we obtained two Pleistocene rates of 5.0–11.2 and <20.0 mm yr −1 , consistent with the regional geodesy. This indicates that the Boconó fault in the Yaracuy Valley accommodates 40 to 100% of the deformation between the South American plate and the Maracaibo Block. As no aseismic deformation was shown by interferometric synthetic aperture radar analysis, we assume that the fault is locked since the 1812 event. This implies that there is a slip deficit in the Yaracuy Valley since the last earthquake ranging from ~1 to 4 m, corresponding to a M w 7–7.6 earthquake. This magnitude is comparable to the 1812 earthquake and to other historical events along the Boconó fault.