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Long‐Term Lithospheric Strength and Upper‐Plate Seismicity in the Southern Central Andes, 29°–39°S
Author(s) -
Rodriguez Piceda C.,
ScheckWenderoth M.,
Cacace M.,
Bott J.,
Strecker M. R.
Publication year - 2022
Publication title -
geochemistry, geophysics, geosystems
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.928
H-Index - 136
ISSN - 1525-2027
DOI - 10.1029/2021gc010171
Subject(s) - geology , induced seismicity , foreland basin , lithosphere , forearc , seismology , subduction , plate tectonics , tectonics
We examined the relationship between the mechanical strength of the lithosphere and the distribution of seismicity within the overriding continental plate of the southern Central Andes (SCA, 29°–39°S), where the oceanic Nazca Plate changes its subduction angle between 33°S and 35°S, from subhorizontal in the north (<5°) to steep in the south (∼30°). We computed the long‐term lithospheric strength based on an existing 3D model describing variations in thickness, density, and temperature of the main geological units forming the lithosphere of the SCA and adjacent forearc and foreland regions. The comparison between our results and seismicity within the overriding plate (upper‐plate seismicity) shows that most of the events occur within the modeled brittle domain of the lithosphere. The depth where the deformation mode switches from brittle frictional to thermally activated ductile creep provides a conservative lower bound to the seismogenic zone in the overriding plate of the study area. We also found that the majority of upper‐plate earthquakes occurs within the realm of first‐order contrasts in integrated strength (12.7–13.3 log Pam in the Andean orogen vs. 13.5–13.9 log Pam in the forearc and the foreland). Specific conditions characterize the mechanically strong northern foreland of the Andes, where seismicity is likely explained by the effects of slab steepening.

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