dot
Detailansicht
Katalogkarte GBA
Katalogkarte ISBD
Suche präzisieren
Drucken
Download RIS
Hier klicken, um den Treffer aus der Auswahl zu entfernen
Titel Slab roll-back and trench retreat as controlling factor for basin subsidence in southern Central America
VerfasserIn Christian Brandes, Jutta Winsemann
Konferenz EGU General Assembly 2015
Medientyp Artikel
Sprache Englisch
Digitales Dokument PDF
Erschienen In: GRA - Volume 17 (2015)
Datensatznummer 250102063
Publikation (Nr.) Volltext-Dokument vorhandenEGU/EGU2015-1342.pdf
 
Zusammenfassung
Slab roll-back and trench retreat are important factors for basin subsidence, magma generation and volcanism in arc-trench systems. Based on the sedimentary and tectonic record of the southern Central American island-arc we conclude that repeated phases of slab roll-back and trench retreats occurred the arc-trench system since the Late Cretaceous. These trench retreats were most probably related to the subduction of oceanic plateaus and seamounts and effected both the fore-arc and back-arc evolution. We used numerical basin modelling techniques to analyse the burial history of fore-arc and back-arc basins in Central America and combined the results with field data of the sedimentological evolution of the basin-fills. From the basin models, geohistory curves were extracted for the fore-arc and back-arc basins to derive the subsidence evolution. The Sandino Fore-arc Basin is characterized by low subsidence during the first 40 Myr. Since the Late Cretaceous the basin has a linear moderate subsidence with a phase of accelerated subsidence in the Oligocene. In the North and South Limón Back-arc Basin, subsidence started at approximately the same time as in the Sandino Fore-arc Basin. The North and South Limón Basins show a linear subsidence trend in the Paleocene and Eocene. Evidence for trench retreats is given by pulses of uplift in the outer-arc area, followed by subsidence in both the fore-arc and back-arc basins. The first slab roll-back probably occurred during the Early Paleocene. This is indicated by the collapse of carbonate platforms, and the re-deposition of large carbonate blocks into deep-water turbidites. A new pulse of uplift or decreased subsidence, respectively during the Late Eocene is attributed to subduction of rough crust. A subsequent slab detachment and the establishment of a new subduction zone further westward was described by Walther et al. (2000). Strong uplift affected the entire fore-arc area, which led to the deposition of very coarse-grained deepwater channel-levee complexes in the Sandino Fore-arc Basin. The channel-fills are rich in reworked shallow-water carbonates that points to strong uplift of the inner fore-arc. A subsequent trench retreat is indicated by an increased subsidence during the Early Oligocene in the Sandino Fore-arc Basin and the collapse of the Barra Honda carbonate platform in North Costa Rica. Another trench retreat might have occurred in Miocene times (Cailleau and Oncken, 2008). A phase of higher subsidence from 18 to 13 Ma is documented in the geohistory curve of the North Limon Back-arc Basin. After a short pulse of uplift the subsidence increased to approx. 300 m/myr (Brandes et al., 2008). References: Brandes C., Astorga A., Littke R. and Winsemann J. (2008) Basin modelling of the Limón Back-arc Basin (Costa Rica): burial history and temperature evolution of an island-arc related basin system. Basin Research 20, 1, 119-142. Cailleau, B. and Oncken, O. (2008) Past forearc deformation in Nicaragua and coupling at the megathrust interface: Evidence for subduction retreat. Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems 9, Q07S24, doi:10.1029/2007GC001754. Walther, C.H.E., Flueh, E.R., Ranero, C.R., von Huene, R. and Strauch, W. (2000) Crustal structure across the Pacific margin of Nicaragua: evidence for ophiolithic basement and a shallow mantle sliver. Geophysical Journal International 141, 759-777.