4.1 Article

Impact of the Iquique Ridge on structure and deformation of the north Chilean subduction zone

Journal

JOURNAL OF SOUTH AMERICAN EARTH SCIENCES
Volume 124, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jsames.2023.104262

Keywords

Iquique ridge; Northern Chile; Trench; 2014; Iquique earthquake; Seismic reflection

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This study accurately maps the structures related to ridge subduction under the marine forearc in the Chilean subduction zone using advanced seismic reflection data processing. The subducting ridge-related topography causes upward bulging of the entire upper plate and the presence of kilometer-scale anticlinal structures. Frontal subduction erosion is observed in the area affected by the subducting ridge, while a small frontal prism and sediment cover are found in the region where isolated seamounts subduct.
The subduction of seamounts and basement ridges affects the structure, morphology, and physical state of a convergent margin. To evaluate their impact on the seismo-tectonic setting of the subduction zone and the tectonic development of the lower subducting and upper overriding plate, it is essential to know the precise location of subducted topographic features under the marine forearc. Offshore Northern Chile, the Iquique Ridge represents a broad zone of complex and heterogeneous structure of variable width on the oceanic Nazca Plate, which complicates attempts to project it beneath the forearc of the Chilean subduction zone. Here we use a stateof-the-art seismic reflection data processing approach to map structures related to ridge subduction under the marine forearc with unprecedented accuracy and resolution and evaluate their impact on the deformation of both the plate boundary and the upper plate. We show that significant ridge-related topography is currently subducting south of 20.5 degrees S and that the combined effect of horst and graben subduction with subduction of Iquique ridge-related thickened and elevated crust causes an upward bulging of the entire upper plate from the plate interface up to the seafloor as well as the presence of kilometer-scale anticlinal structures observed in multibeam bathymetric data that are approximately aligned with horsts seaward of the trench. In the area affected by the subducting ridge, a frontal prism is absent, which may relate to frontal subduction erosion caused by the excess lower plate topography. In contrast farther towards the north, where only isolated seamounts subduct, a small frontal prism and a slope/apron sediment cover down to 3000 m water depth are found.

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