scholarly journals Strike-slip Enables Subduction Initiation beneath a Failed Rift: New Seismic Constraints from Puysegur Margin, New Zealand

Author(s):  
Brandon Shuck ◽  
Harm J.A. Van Avendonk ◽  
Sean P. S. Gulick ◽  
Michael Gurnis ◽  
Rupert Sutherland ◽  
...  
Tectonics ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Brandon Shuck ◽  
Harm Van Avendonk ◽  
Sean P. S. Gulick ◽  
Michael Gurnis ◽  
Rupert Sutherland ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Brandon Shuck ◽  
Harm Van Avendonk ◽  
Sean Gulick ◽  
Michael Gurnis ◽  
Rupert Sutherland ◽  
...  

<p>Critical ingredients and conditions necessary to initiate a new subduction zone are debated. General agreement is that subduction initiation likely takes advantage of previously weakened lithosphere and may prefer to nucleate along pre-existing plate boundaries. To evaluate how past tectonic regimes and lithospheric structures might facilitate underthrusting and lead to self-sustaining subduction, we present an analysis of the Puysegur Margin, a young subduction zone with a rapidly evolving tectonic history.</p><p> </p><p>The Puysegur Margin, south of New Zealand, currently accommodates convergence between the Australian and Pacific plates, exhibits an active seismic Benioff zone, a deep ocean trench, and young adakitic volcanism on the overriding plate. Tectonic plate reconstructions show that the margin experienced a complicated transformation from rifting to seafloor spreading, to strike-slip motion, and most recently to incipient subduction, all in the last ~45 million years. Details of this tectonic record remained incomplete due to the lack of high-quality seismic data throughout much of the margin.</p><p> </p><p>Here we present seismic images from the South Island Subduction Initiation Experiment (SISIE) which surveyed the Puysegur region February-March, 2018. SISIE acquired 1252 km of deep-penetrating multichannel seismic (MCS) data on 7 transects, including 2 regional dip lines coincident with Ocean Bottom Seismometers (OBS) deployments which extend (west to east) from the incoming Australian plate, across the Puysegur Trench and Puysegur Ridge, over the Solander Basin and onto the continental Campbell Plateau margin.</p><p> </p><p>We integrate pre-stack depth migrated MCS profiles with OBS tomography models to constrain the tectonic development of the Puysegur Margin. Based on our results we propose the following Cenozoic evolution: (1) The entire Solander Basin contains thinned continental crust which formed from orthogonal stretching between the Campbell and Challenger plateaus during the Eocene-Oligocene. This phase of rifting was more pronounced to the south, producing thinner crust with abundant syn-rift volcanism across a wider rift-basin, in contrast to the relatively thicker crust, moderate syn-rift volcanism and narrower rift basin in the north. (2) Strike-slip deformation subsequently developed along Puysegur Ridge, west of the locus of rifting and within relatively unstretched continental lithosphere. This young strike-slip plate boundary translated unstretched crust northward causing an oblique continent-collision zone, which led to a transpressional pattern of distributed left-stepping, right-lateral faults. (3) Subduction initiation was aided by large density contrasts as oceanic lithosphere translated from the south was forcibly underthrust beneath the continent-collision zone. Early development of oblique subduction generated modest and widespread reactivation of faults in the upper plate. (4) Present-day, the Puysegur Trench shows a spatiotemporal transition from nearly mature subduction in the north to a recently initiated stage along the southernmost margin, requiring a southward propagation of subduction through time.</p><p> </p><p>Our new seismic images suggest subduction initiation at the Puysegur Margin was assisted by inherited buoyancy contrasts and structural weaknesses that were imprinted into the lithosphere during earlier phases of continental rifting and strike-slip along the developing plate boundary. The Puysegur Margin demonstrates that forced nucleation along a strike-slip boundary is a viable subduction initiation model and should be considered throughout Earth’s history.</p>


2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Julie Newman ◽  
◽  
Eric D. Stewart ◽  
Basil Tikoff ◽  
Brent Miller ◽  
...  

2011 ◽  
Vol 44 (3) ◽  
pp. 283-291 ◽  
Author(s):  
D.J.A. Barrell ◽  
N.J. Litchfield ◽  
D.B. Townsend ◽  
M. Quigley ◽  
R.J. Van Dissen ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Duna Roda-Boluda ◽  
Taylor Schildgen ◽  
Hella Wittmann-Oelze ◽  
Stefanie Tofelde ◽  
Aaron Bufe ◽  
...  

<p>The Southern Alps of New Zealand are the expression of the oblique convergence between the Pacific and Australian plates, which move at a relative velocity of nearly 40 mm/yr. This convergence is accommodated by the range-bounding Alpine Fault, with a strike-slip component of ~30-40 mm/yr, and a shortening component normal to the fault of ~8-10 mm/yr. While strike-slip rates seem to be fairly constant along the Alpine Fault, throw rates appear to vary considerably, and whether the locus of maximum exhumation is located near the fault, at the main drainage divide, or part-way between, is still debated. These uncertainties stem from very limited data characterizing vertical deformation rates along and across the Southern Alps. Thermochronology has constrained the Southern Alps exhumation history since the Miocene, but Quaternary exhumation is hard to resolve precisely due to the very high exhumation rates. Likewise, GPS surveys estimate a vertical uplift of ~5 mm/yr, but integrate only over ~10 yr timescales and are restricted to one transect across the range.</p><p>To obtain insights into the Quaternary distribution and rates of exhumation of the western Southern Alps, we use new <sup>10</sup>Be catchment-averaged erosion rates from 20 catchments along the western side of the range. Catchment-averaged erosion rates span an order of magnitude, between ~0.8 and >10 mm/yr, but we find that erosion rates of >10 mm/yr, a value often quoted in the literature as representative for the entire range, are very localized. Moreover, erosion rates decrease sharply north of the intersection with the Marlborough Fault System, suggesting substantial slip partitioning. These <sup>10</sup>Be catchment-averaged erosion rates integrate, on average, over the last ~300 yrs. Considering that the last earthquake on the Alpine Fault was in 1717, these rates are representative of inter-seismic erosion. Lake sedimentation rates and coseismic landslide modelling suggest that long-term (~10<sup>3</sup> yrs) erosion rates over a full seismic cycle could be ~40% greater than our inter-seismic erosion rates. If we assume steady state topography, such a scaling of our <sup>10</sup>Be erosion rate estimates can be used to estimate rock uplift rates in the Southern Alps. Finally, we find that erosion, and hence potentially exhumation, does not seem to be localized at a particular distance from the fault, as some tectonic and provenance studies have suggested. Instead, we find that superimposed on the primary tectonic control, there is an elevation/temperature control on erosion rates, which is probably transient and related to frost-cracking and glacial retreat.</p><p>Our results highlight the potential for <sup>10</sup>Be catchment-averaged erosion rates to provide insights into the magnitude and distribution of tectonic deformation rates, and the limitations that arise from transient erosion controls related to the seismic cycle and climate-modulated surface processes.</p><p> </p><p> </p>


Tectonics ◽  
2000 ◽  
Vol 19 (4) ◽  
pp. 688-706 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jean-Frédéric Lebrun ◽  
Geoffroy Lamarche ◽  
Jean-Yves Collot ◽  
Jean Delteil

Author(s):  
Timothy A. Little ◽  
Russ Van Dissen ◽  
Uwe Rieser ◽  
Euan G. C. Smith ◽  
Rob M. Langridge
Keyword(s):  

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