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Distributed deformation ahead of the Cocos‐Nazca Rift at the Galapagos triple junction
Author(s) -
Smith Deborah K.,
Schouten Hans,
Zhu Wenlu,
Montési Laurent G. J.,
Cann Johnson R.
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
geochemistry, geophysics, geosystems
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.928
H-Index - 136
ISSN - 1525-2027
DOI - 10.1029/2011gc003689
Subject(s) - triple junction , geology , rift , deformation (meteorology) , seismology , geophysics , oceanography , tectonics
The Galapagos triple junction is not a simple ridge‐ridge‐ridge (RRR) triple junction. The Cocos‐Nazca Rift (C‐N Rift) tip does not meet the East Pacific Rise (EPR). Instead, two secondary rifts form the link: Incipient Rift at 2°40′N and Dietz Deep volcanic ridge, the southern boundary of the Galapagos microplate (GMP), at 1°10′N. Recently collected bathymetry data are used to investigate the regional tectonics prior to the establishment of the GMP (∼1.5 Ma). South of C‐N Rift a band of northeast‐trending cracks cuts EPR‐generated abyssal hills. It is a mirror image of a band of cracks previously identified north of C‐N Rift on the same age crust. In both areas, the western ends of the cracks terminate against intact abyssal hills suggesting that each crack initiated at the EPR spreading center and cut eastward into pre‐existing topography. Each crack formed a short‐lived triple junction until it was abandoned and a new crack and triple junction initiated nearby. Between 2.5 and 1.5 Ma, the pattern of cracking is remarkably symmetric about C‐N Rift providing support for a crack interaction model in which crack initiation at the EPR axis is controlled by stresses associated with the tip of the westward‐propagating C‐N Rift. The model also shows that offsets of the EPR axis may explain times when cracking is not symmetric. South of C‐N Rift, cracks are observed on seafloor as old as 10.5 Ma suggesting that this triple junction has not been a simple RRR triple junction during that time.

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