Barbados: Architecture and implications for accretion
- 10 May 1982
- journal article
- Published by American Geophysical Union (AGU) in Journal of Geophysical Research
- Vol. 87 (B5) , 3633-3643
- https://doi.org/10.1029/jb087ib05p03633
Abstract
The island of Barbados exposes the crestal zone of the remarkably broad accretionary prism of the Lesser Antilles foreacrc. The architecture of Barbados is three‐tiered: an upper arched cap of Pleistocene reefs that record rapid and differential uplift of the island, an intermediate zone of nappes of mainly abyssal or deep bathyal pelagic rocks, and a basal complex whose lithotypes extend to substantial depth and may be representative of the bulk of the western or inner accretionary prism. The exposed basal complex consists of generally steeply dipping ENE to NE‐striking fault‐bounded packets which contain rocks of one of three lithic suites: terrigenous (quartzose turbidite and mudstone), debris flow, and hemipelagic (chiefly radiolarite). Present but imcomplete rock dating indicates that the terrigenous and hemipelagic suites and the pelagic rocks of the intermediate zone are age overlapping in Early and Middle Eocene time. Deformation within packets of the basal complex is systematic, pre‐ or synfault, and indicative of shortening that is generally normal to packet boundaries. A unit of terrigenous materials that probably underwent local resedimentation in the Miocene is recognized in wells, but its relationship to exposed rocks is uncertain. The packet‐bounding faults of the basal complex are interpreted to have been primary accretionary surfaces which may have been reactivated by later intraprism movements. Exposed sedimentary rocks of Barbados can be successfully assigned to contemporaneous depositional sites associated with an accretionary prism: terrigenous beds to a trench wedge that was connected to South American sediment sources, debris flow to trench floor or slope basin accumulations of material derived from the lower slope, hemipelagic to Atlantic plain strata, and pelagic rocks of the intermediate zone to deep outer forearc basin sites. The decollement at the base of the intermediate zone is probably due to uplift and arcward motion of the crestal zone of the accretionary prism with respect to the forearc basin during progressive prism growth. Principal uplift of the prism seems to have started, apparently abruptly, in the Miocene. Quaternary uplift of Barbados may be due partly to local diapirism. Paleogene subduction that created the arcward region of the prism probably occurred in a differently configured zone from the present one.Keywords
This publication has 13 references indexed in Scilit:
- Multibeam bathymetric survey and high resolution seismic investigations on the Barbados Ridge complex (Eastern Caribbean): A key to the knowledge and interpretation of an accretionary wedgePublished by Elsevier ,2003
- Offscraping and underthrusting of sediment at the deformation front of the Barbados Ridge: Deep Sea Drilling Project Leg 78AGSA Bulletin, 1982
- Structural geology of Nias Island, Indonesia; implications for subduction zone tectonicsAmerican Journal of Science, 1980
- A seismic refraction investigation of crustal structure beneath the Lesser Antilles island arcGeophysical Journal International, 1979
- Uranium-series dating of the Pleistocene reef tracts of Barbados, West IndiesGSA Bulletin, 1979
- Structural fabric of a melange, Kodiak Islands, AlaskaAmerican Journal of Science, 1978
- Relative motion of South America with respect to North America and Caribbean tectonicsGSA Bulletin, 1976
- The Structure of the Crust and Upper Mantle in the Region of Barbados and the Lesser AntillesGeophysical Journal International, 1975
- Subduction and Accretion in TrenchesGSA Bulletin, 1975
- Underthrusting of the Eastern Margin of the Antilles by the floor of the western North Atlantic Ocean, and origin of the Barbados RidgeJournal of Geophysical Research, 1969