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Clarke, A.P., Vannucchi, P., Morgan, J.P 2017

Seamount – Subduction Zone Interactions: Impact of ocean floor relief on subduction accretion/erosion & subduction channel heterogeneity

Tectonic Studies Group Joint Assembly, Liverpool, UK, 4 – 6 January 2017, (Oral)


Abstract

The Osa Mélange, together with the Osa Igneous Complex, comprise an accreted igneous terrane located in southwest Costa Rica that forms the forearc of the erosive Middle America Subduction Zone at the depth of seismic nucleation. The tectonic setting in which this mélange formed remains unconstrained with both the ocean trench (DiMarco et al., 1995; Buchs et al., 2009) and seamount flanks (Vannucchi et al., 2006) considered.

This mélange is highly heterogeneous and consists predominantly of deformed debris avalanche deposits interlayered with pelagic sediment, and up to 800 metre thick blocks of brecciated basalt with Galapagos seamount affinity (Hauff et al. 1997, 2000; Hoernle et al. 2002). No material derived from the Central American arc or forearc was found. Detailed microstructural, petrological and geomechanical analysis has been conducted on this material in order to characterise its physical properties and constrain its model of formation.

Both the brecciated basalts and clastic sedimentary rocks exhibit considerable brecciation and cataclasis not confined to discreet shear zones. This results in the large blocks themselves possessing a pervasive block-in-matrix texture, with comminuted fracture-fill as the mechanical matrix. Extensive hydrothermal alteration of the basalts has also contributed to the deformation of this material.

The high sediment volumes and lack of blocks exotic to the Farallon Plate indicate deposition in an oceanic setting, adjacent to a seamount train, and away from the continental margin. We therefore propose that the Osa Mélange was formed in the flexural moat of a Galapagos hotspot-derived seamount complex.

Subduction erosion — a process whereby material is removed from the hanging wall of the subduction zone as it migrates upwards — leads to the active entrainment of Osa Mélange material into the plate boundary interface of the Middle America Subduction Zone. Characterising the inputs into this subduction zone is necessary to understand the processes operating at the depth of seismic nucleation — a major objective of the IODP CRISP project. Our improved understanding of the parameters of seismic and aseismic slip within the Middle America Subduction Zone may be extrapolated to other erosive subduction zones around the world.

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I’m Alex Clarke

I am a structural geologist working as a Postdoctoral Researcher at Johannes Gutenberg–Universität Mainz and a hobbyist girl-with-camera.

My research focuses on the heterogeneities within large faults, shear zones, and subduction zone mélanges — how to map them, quantify them, and explain their origins. I am especially interested in 3D reconstructions of rocks and outcrops which allow detailed, realistic, and quantifiable models of natural phenomena. I also love to teach and I am interested in innovative and engaging methods of teaching earth sciences, both in the classroom and in the field.

In my free time, I enjoy photography and my images reflects my love of nature and the diverse forms nature can take.