Revised tectonic boundaries in the Cocos Plate off Costa Rica: Implications for the segmentation of the convergent margin and for plate tectonic models
Top Cited Papers
- 10 September 2001
- journal article
- Published by American Geophysical Union (AGU) in Journal of Geophysical Research
- Vol. 106 (B9) , 19207-19220
- https://doi.org/10.1029/2001jb000238
Abstract
The oceanic Cocos Plate subducting beneath Costa Rica has a complex plate tectonic history resulting in segmentation. New lines of magnetic data clearly define tectonic boundaries which separate lithosphere formed at the East Pacific Rise from lithosphere formed at the Cocos‐Nazca spreading center. They also define two early phase Cocos‐Nazca spreading regimes and a major propagator. In addition to these sharply defined tectonic boundaries are overprinted boundaries from volcanism during passage of Cocos Plate over the Galapagos hot spot. The subducted segment boundaries correspond with distinct changes in upper plate tectonic structure and features of the subducted slab. Newly identified seafloor‐spreading anomalies show oceanic lithosphere formed during initial breakup of the Farallon Plate at 22.7 Ma and opening of the Cocos‐Nazca spreading center. A revised regional compilation of magnetic anomalies allows refinement of plate tectonic models for the early history of the Cocos‐Nazca spreading center. At 19.5 Ma a major ridge jump reshaped its geometry, and after ∼14.5 Ma multiple southward ridge jumps led to a highly asymmetric accretion of lithosphere. A suspected cause of ridge jumps is an interaction of the Cocos‐Nazca spreading center with the Galapagos hot spot.This publication has 28 references indexed in Scilit:
- Central Costa Rica deformed belt: Kinematics of diffuse faulting across the western Panama blockTectonics, 2000
- Quaternary convergent margin tectonics of Costa Rica, segmentation of the Cocos Plate, and Central American volcanismTectonics, 2000
- Extinct spreading on the Cocos RidgeTerra Nova, 1998
- Global Sea Floor Topography from Satellite Altimetry and Ship Depth SoundingsScience, 1997
- Fastest known spreading on the Miocene Cocos‐Pacific Plate BoundaryGeophysical Research Letters, 1996
- Tectonic structure of the convergent Pacific margin offshore Costa Rica from multichannel seismic reflection dataTectonics, 1996
- The March 25, 1990 (Mw = 7.0, ML = 6.8), earthquake at the entrance of the Nicoya Gulf, Costa Rica: Its prior activity, foreshocks, aftershocks, and triggered seismicityJournal of Geophysical Research, 1995
- History of rift propagation and magnetization intensity for the Cocos‐Nazca sspreading CenterJournal of Geophysical Research, 1995
- Revised calibration of the geomagnetic polarity timescale for the Late Cretaceous and CenozoicJournal of Geophysical Research, 1995
- Structure and tectonic history of the eastern Panama BasinGSA Bulletin, 1978