Subduction dynamics at the middle America trench : new constraints from swath bathymetry, multichannel seismic data, and 10BE
Subduction dynamics at the middle America trench : new constraints from swath bathymetry, multichannel seismic data, and 10BE
Date
2003-09
Authors
Kelly, Robyn K.
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As Published
Date Created
Location
Middle America Trench
DOI
10.1575/1912/2458
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Keywords
Subduction zones
Seismic prospecting
Marine sediments
Beryllium
Isotopes
Radioisotopes in oceanography
Maurice Ewing (Ship) Cruise EW0005
Maurice Ewing (Ship) Cruise EW0104
Sonne (Ship) CruiseSO76
Fred H. Moore (Ship) Cruise FM3502
Ida Green (Ship) Cruise IG2402
Seismic prospecting
Marine sediments
Beryllium
Isotopes
Radioisotopes in oceanography
Maurice Ewing (Ship) Cruise EW0005
Maurice Ewing (Ship) Cruise EW0104
Sonne (Ship) CruiseSO76
Fred H. Moore (Ship) Cruise FM3502
Ida Green (Ship) Cruise IG2402
Abstract
The cosmogenic radionuclide 10Be is a unique tracer of shallow sediment subduction in
volcanic arcs. The range in 10Be enrichment in the Central American Volcanic Arc
between Guatemala and Costa Rica is not controlled by variations in 10Be concentrations
in subducting sediment seaward of the Middle America Trench. Sedimentary 10Be is
correlated negatively with 143Nd/144Nd, illustrating that 10Be concentrations varied both
between and within cores due to mixing between terrigenous clay and volcanic ash
endmember components. This mixing behavior was determined to be a function of grain
size controls on 10Be concentrations. A negative correlation of bulk sedimentary 10Be
concentrations with median grain size and a positive correlation with the proportion of
the sediment grains that were <32 μm in diameter demonstrated that high concentrations
of 10Be in fine-grained, terrigenous sediments were diluted by larger grained
volcanogenic material.
The sharp decrease in 10Be enrichment in the Central American Volcanic Arc between
southeastern Nicaragua and northwestern Costa Rica correlates with changes in fault
structure in the subducting Cocos plate. Offshore of Nicaragua, extensional faults
associated with plate bending have throw equal to or greater than the overlying
subducting sediment thickness. These faults enable efficient subduction of the entire
sediment package by preventing relocation of the décollement within the downgoing
sediments. Offshore of Costa Rica, the reduction of fault relief results in basement faults
that do not penetrate the overlying sediment. A conceptual model is proposed in which
the absence of significant basement roughness allows the décollement to descend into the
subducting sediment column, leading to subsequent underplating and therefore removal
of the bulk of the sediment layer that contains 10Be.
Basement fault relief was linearly related to plate curvature and trench depth. The
systematic shoaling of the plate from southeastern Nicaragua to northwestern Costa Rica
is not explained by changes in plate age for this region. Instead, it is hypothesized that the
flexural shape of the plate offshore of southeastern Nicaragua and northwestern Costa
Rica represents a lateral response to a buoyant load caused by the thick crust and elevated
thermal regime in the Cocos plate offshore of southeastern Costa Rica.
Description
Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution September 2003
Embargo Date
Citation
Kelly, R. K. (2003). Subduction dynamics at the middle America trench : new constraints from swath bathymetry, multichannel seismic data, and 10BE [Doctoral thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology and Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution]. Woods Hole Open Access Server. https://doi.org/10.1575/1912/2458