Marine and terrestrial magnetic surveys have been integrated to study the tectonic structure of the convergent margin of Chile between 32°-34° S. Three magnetic domains have been identified: oceanic, continental margin, and subaerial. The oceanic domain has seafloor spreading anomalies (16 (∼37 Ma) to 18 (∼39.5 Ma)) disturbed by anomalies of the Juan Fernandez hot spot chain. In the continental margin, the most prominent fabric are E-W anomalies in the upper slope corresponding to onshore E-W anomalies of large intrusive bodies. Onshore, a N-S lineament of short-wavelength anomalies defines the roots of a Cretaceous volcanic arc. A resembling lineament offshore indicates a submerged older volcanic arc and that continental basement extends to ∼50 km landward of the trench. Absolute Cenozoic plate motion for Nazca and South American plates and dating of the Juan Fernandez chain provide a kinematic model of ridge-continent collision. The reconstruction indicates rapid southward migration of the collision point along ∼1400 km of the margin from 20 to 11 Ma (∼20 cm yr-1). From 11 Ma to present the collison point has migrated at a slower rate along ∼375 km of the margin (3.5 cm yr-1). The predicted location of the subducted portion of the Juan Fernandez chain coincides with the south edge of the southward migrating flat slab segment of the subducted lithosphere and with a cluster of deep earthquakes indicating a causal relationship. In the last ∼10 Myr the ridge has separated a sediment starved trench to the north where subduction erosion may dominate from a sediment filled trench to the south where recent sediment accretion dominates. These observations indicate that subduction of the Juan Fernández chain plays a major role in arc-forearc tectonics. Copyright 2001 by the American Geophysical Union.
CITATION STYLE
Yáñez, G. A., Ranero, C. R., Von Huene, R., & Díaz, J. (2001). Magnetic anomaly interpretation across the southern central Andes (32°-34°S): The role of the Juan Fernández Ridge in the late Tertiary evolution of the margin. Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth, 106(B4), 6325–6345. https://doi.org/10.1029/2000jb900337
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