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Architecture and tectonostratigraphic evolution of the Pescadero Basin Complex, southern Gulf of California: Analysis of high-resolution bathymetry data and seismic reflection profiles

Authors :
Néstor Ramírez-Zerpa
Ronald M. Spelz
Ismael Yarbuh
Raquel Negrete-Aranda
Juan Contreras
David A. Clague
Florian Neumann
David W. Caress
Robert Zierenberg
Antonio González-Fernández
Source :
Journal of South American Earth Sciences
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

The Pescadero Basin Complex (PBC) comprises three distinctive rhomb-shaped pull-apart basins separated by short and highly overlapped transform faults. Multibeam bathymetric data collected from ship at 40-m resolution, combined with the interpretation of three 2D high-resolution multichannel seismic reflection profiles, were used to establish the architecture of the PBC. Detailed mapping and cross-sectional kinematic modeling based on the seismic images of the North Pescadero Basin reveal a highly evolved pull-part geometry, characterized by a well defined ∼1.8 km-wide axial graben extending ∼32 km in a NNE-SSW direction. Among the fundamental elements controlling basin architecture and evolution of the PBC are the geometry of the initial configuration of the master strike-slip fault step-over and fault dynamics, which may cause transients in fault system activity and basin reconfigurations. Structural analyses carried out in this study point out the PBC pull-apart basins developed under sustained transtensional deformation, where the relative motion of the crustal blocks is oblique and divergent to the transforms or principal displacement zones. Cross-cutting relationships between the main fault systems controlling basin's subsidence and evolution, indicate that underdeveloped basin-crossing faults terminate against basin bounding normal faults, suggesting that ongoing pull-apart rifting continues to dominate basin evolution of the PBC. Furthermore, we propose that the undeveloped cross-basin faults of the PBC initiated as synthetic Riedel faults that, with progressive deformation along the divergent-wrench fault zone, rotated clockwise around a vertical axis to acquire their present orientation oblique to the master bounding transforms. Basin-crossing faults with lesser obliquities control the subsidence along the basin-side faulted segments of the narrow graben systems that characterize the plate boundary at the corners of the PBC pull-apart basins. These narrow transtensional synforms may have served as connections facilitating marine waters to flood the PBC during the early stages of formation of the Gulf of California.

Subjects

Subjects :
Geology
Earth-Surface Processes

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of South American Earth Sciences
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....2b4c7781bdc33143dff1d0708cf0f98c