Litcius/Paper detail

Slip rates along the narrow Magallanes Fault System, Tierra Del Fuego Region, Patagonia

Francisca Sandoval, Gregory P. De Pascale

2020Scientific Reports27 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The up to 1000 km-long Magallanes Fault System (MFS) is the southernmost onshore strike-slip plate boundary and located between the South American and Scotia Plates. Slip-rates, a key factor for understanding neotectonics and seismic hazard are only available there from geodetic models. In this study, we present the first direct geologic evidence of MFS slip rates. Late-Cenozoic slip rates along the main MF is 5.4 ± 3.3 mm/yr based on lithologic geological separations found in regional mapping. Late-Quaternary deformation from offset geomorphologic markers was documented along the MFS in Chile and Argentina based on a combination of satellite mapping, fieldwork, and Structure from Motion (SfM) models developed from drone photography. By combining displacements observed in SfM models with regional Late-Quaternary dating, sinistral slip rates are 10.5 ± 1.5 mm/yr (Chile) and 7.8 ± 1.3 mm/yr (Argentina). By comparing our results with regional models, contemporary plate boundary deformation is narrow, approximately ~20-50 km wide from Tierra Del Fuego (TdF) and east (one of the narrowest on Earth), which widens and becoming more diffuse from Cabo Froward north and west (>100 km wide). In addition to the tectonic implications, these faults should be considered important sources of fault rupture and seismic hazard.

Topics & Concepts

GeologyTierraQuaternarySeismologySlip (aerodynamics)NeotectonicsSeismic hazardGeodetic datumSinistral and dextralCenozoicTectonicsPlate tectonicsFault (geology)PaleontologyGeodesyStructural basinPhysicsComputer scienceArtificial intelligenceThermodynamicsearthquake and tectonic studiesGeological and Geochemical AnalysisGeology and Paleoclimatology Research