Evidence for Caribbean plate subduction in southern Costa Rica
Fecha
2023
Autores
Bourke, James
Levin, Vadim
Arroyo Hidalgo, Ivonne Gabriela
Linkimer Abarca, Lepolt
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Nestled between the Cocos, Nazca, Caribbean, and South American plates, the Panama
microplate represents an area of rapidly evolving tectonics throughout the past ∼10 m.y. Past
and current studies have observed a notable amount of seismicity throughout this region, in
particular the Caribbean coast of Costa Rica, which experienced a Mw 7.7 earthquake in 1991
CE. We investigated the crust and upper mantle structure of this region using the receiver
function methodology and report two results: (1) first-order lateral constraints on the position
of the Panama microplate boundary near the intersection between the Central Costa Rica
Deformed Belt (onshore) and North Panama Deformed Belt (offshore), and (2) an impedance
contrast south and east of these belts, supporting that the Caribbean plate currently subducts
beneath the Panama microplate. Observed local seismicity is a consequence of the recently
(ca. 14 Ma) initiated Caribbean plate subduction beneath the overlying Panama microplate.
Our results are also consistent with a doubly convergent subduction margin dominating
southern Costa Rica tectonics, uplifting the Talamanca Cordillera, and causing the cessation
of southern Costa Rica volcanism over the past ∼10 m.y
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https://pubs.geoscienceworld.org/gsa/geology/article-abstract/51/4/408/620797/Evidence-for-Caribbean-plate-subduction-in?redirectedFrom=fulltext