Abstract
Processing and analysis of new multichannel seismic records, coincident with wide-angle seismic profiles, acquired in the framework of the TsuJal project allow us to investigate in detail the complex structure of the oceanic domain in the collision zone between Rivera Plate and Block Jalisco at its northern termination. The subducting Rivera Plate, which is overridden by the North American Plate–Jalisco Block, is clearly identified up to 21.5°N (just south of Maria Magdalena Island) as a two clear reflections that we interpret as the interplate and Moho discontinuities. North of the Tres Marias Islands the seismic images display a different tectonic scenario with structures that are consistent with large faulting and rifted margin. A two-dimensional velocity approach for the crustal geometry is achieved using joint refraction/reflection travel time tomography, the uncertainty of the results is assessed by means of Monte Carlo analysis. Our results show an average oceanic crustal thickness of 6–7 km with a moderate increase towards the Jalisco Block, an anomalous thick layers (~3.0 km) displaying a relatively low velocity (~5.5 km/s) underneath Maria Magdalena Rise, and an estimated Moho depth deeper than 15 km in the collision zone between Rivera Plate and Jalisco Block. We have also determined an anomalous crust on the western flank of the Tres Marias Islands, which may be related to the initial phases of continental breakup of the Baja California Peninsula and Mexico mainland. High-resolution bathymetry provides remarkable images of intensive slope instabilities marked by relatively large slides scars of more than 40 km2 extent, and mass-wasting deposits probably triggered by the intense seismicity in the area.
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1 Introduction
The crustal architecture of the western boundary of Mexico is strongly controlled by the Middle America Trench (MAT) which is the morphological expression of an active subduction zone involving the North American Plate overriding the relatively young Rivera and Cocos plates, and it is the location of significant tectonics, widespread seismicity and magmatism (Fig. 1). Both oceanic plates, Rivera and Cocos, are fragments of the Farallon Plate (e.g., Atwater and Stock 1998); the Rivera Plate acting independently since 10 Ma (DeMets and Traylen 2000). The Rivera Plate is a key structural element to understand the complex geodynamic interactions that take place at the west coast of Mexico (Yang et al. 2009); with accreting seafloor along its western boundary, the Pacific Rivera Rise (PRR), and subducting seafloor at the northern tip of the MAT along the Jalisco Block. Several authors have shown that the Rivera Plate is kinematically distinct from the North American and Cocos plates (e.g., Bandy and Yan 1989; DeMets and Stein 1990). Moreover, the eastern termination of the Rivera–Cocos boundary is still uncertain since no bathymetric expressions can be clearly associated with the plate boundary (Bourgois and Michaud 1991; Bandy et al. 1995; Michaud et al. 2001; Peláez Gaviria et al. 2013). The lithosphere of the Rivera Plate, dated as late Miocene near the MAT (Klitgord and Mammerickx 1982), is consumed at the trench at a convergence rate that varies from 5.0 cm/year near the Rivera Cocos Plate Boundary to 2.0–3.0 cm/year along the Tres Marias Escarpment (Kostoglodov and Bandy 1995).
The studies of the internal structure of the subducted plate have relied primarily on potential field data (Bandy et al. 1993, 1999), and only few seismic profiles are reported in the literature (Bourgois et al. 1988; Bourgois and Michaud 1991; Khutorskoy et al. 1994; Michaud et al. 1996; Bandy et al. 2005). In 1996 the Spanish R/V Hespérides and the Mexican R/V´s Altair and Humboldt surveyed the northwestern Mexican margin between 16°N and 30°N in a geophysical experiment named Crustal Offshore Research Transect by Extensive Seismic Profiling, CORTES-P96 (Dañobeitia et al. 1997). During this research expedition swath bathymetry, backscattering and multichannel seismic reflection data and wide-angle profiles were acquired. These data (Bartolome et al. 2011) show a strong reflection, at 2 s (twtt) underneath the sedimentary cover, interpreted as the Moho discontinuity and they computed a mean dip angle of 7° ± 1° for the initial subduction of the Rivera Plate, the dip angle gently increases towards the south. The angle of subduction of the Rivera Plate has been obtained from studies of local seismicity and crustal structure, and displays a gentle subduction angle near the trench (Nuñez-Cornú et al. 2002, 2016), then dives more steeply into the mantle at an angle of 34° (Gutierrez et al. 2015). The Cocos Plate has a slightly curved subducted slab with oblique geometry dipping to the Colima Rift, ranging in dip from 18° in the south to 30° in the north (Gutierrez et al. 2015). This has led to the proposal of a step in the slab between the Cocos and Rivera Plates at the present time (Nixon 1982; Ferrari et al. 2001) formed during a period of very low convergence rate (19 mm/year on average) between 8.5 and 4.6 Ma (DeMets and Traylen 2000).
The seismicity is discontinuous and moderate in magnitude (Nuñez-Cornú et al. 2002; Núñez-Cornú et al. 2004) (Fig. 2), although some of the largest destructive earthquakes in western America are reported offshore of the Jalisco region (Singh et al. 1985; Courboulex et al. 1997). The largest instrumental record occurring in Mexico is the 1932 Jalisco M w = 8.2 event (e.g., Eissler and McNally 1984; Singh et al. 1985; Okal and Borrero 2011). The main event of the 1995 earthquake was a subduction-related thrust earthquake that activated normal faults along the northwest margin of Manzanillo (19ºN, 105ºW, Fig. 2), clearly indicating present day plate convergence. Most of the shocks during the 1932 strike occurred at the Rivera–North America boundary, while the shocks/aftershocks of 1995 seem to happen at the rupture zone between Rivera–Cocos Plate interface (Pacheco et al.1997, Núñez-Cornú 2011).
During the spring of 2014, within the framework of TSUJAL project (Núñez-Cornú et al. 2016), Spanish and Mexican scientists investigated the western margin of Mexico at the collision zone between the Rivera, Cocos and North American plates. The main objective was to define the crustal architecture of this active margin and recognize potential structural sources that can trigger earthquakes and tsunamis at the Rivera–North America convergence zone. To achieve these goals a wide range of geophysical data were acquired aboard the RRS James Cook. Herein we present the northernmost post-stack time migrated multichannel seismic (MCS) sections together with coincident wide-angle (WA) seismic data (Fig. 3). These new data show seismic images from the Earth’s surface down to the Moho that enables to seismically characterize the crustal structure of the overriding and subducting plates in the offshore area of the Jalisco Block. We also describe the spatial distribution of the incoming plates (sediment, crust and uppermost mantle lithosphere) and identify some of the geodynamic processes occurring in this area.
2 Geological Setting
The western margin of Mexico is an active tectonic region displaying ongoing, strong, tectonic plate interactions: spreading process in the East Pacific Rise (EPR) in the West boundary of the Rivera Plate (Mammerickx 1984) at an average half-spreading rate of 2.7 cm/year. Subduction of the Rivera and Cocos plates beneath the North American Plate (NA) in the Middle American Trench (MAT) occur on its eastern boundary. The trench extends from the Tres Marias Islands, located south of the Gulf of California at 21°N, southward along the Mexican coast for a distance of approximately 3000 km, with the distance between the trench axis and the shoreline of only 40–60 km. The boundary between Rivera and Cocos plates and the SE boundary between the three plates (Rivera, Cocos and NA has been classically defined as diffuse, although recent works based on Bouger anomaly gravity models (Alvarez and Yutsis 2015) located the boundary at a line from the MAT to the region of the Colima Volcanic complex. We can find in the SE boundary other processes, such as ridge–trench collisions between the East Pacific Rise (EPR) and the MAT, off Manzanillo, and slab windowing between the Rivera and Cocos plates (Bandy 1992), which is characterized by lithospheric extension and delineated by the El Gordo graben.
The Rivera Plate fragmented from the Cocos Plate at 10 Ma (DeMets and Traylen 2000). Its convergence rate with respect to the North American Plate is moderate, about 2–3 cm/year, although this value and the degree of obliquity (see discussion by Kostoglodov and Bandy 1995) are still debated. This rate is always slower than the adjacent Cocos Plate (5–8 cm/year). Rivera Plate subduction is characterized by a steeper angle and more northerly trajectory than the adjacent Cocos Plate, with a dip angle increasing at depths around 100 km. A summary of DSDP site 473 results and interpretations of a 287 m length core on the Rivera Plate, south of Tres Marias Islands, indicates that older sediments are 6–6.5 m.y. (Upper Miocene) and no older than 8 m.y. with igneous rocks at the end of the core. Moreover, Klitgord and Mammerickx (1982) published that the lithosphere of the Rivera Plate consumed at the trench dates as late as Miocene (approx. 9 Ma), whereas the Cocos crust near the Rivera Plate is 10 Ma and progressively becomes older to the SE, being 25 Ma old at 90°W (Pardo and Suárez 1995; Mammerickx and Kiltgord 1982). Terrigenous clay deposited in the early Pliocene to Quaternary and calcareous claystone deposited during early Pliocene are separated by a strong seismic reflector from the Upper Miocene sediments in the core. Sediments are unexpectedly terrigenous despite the distance from land and the MAT. Sediment accumulation rates are 40 m/m.y. for the last 3 million years and 20 m/m.y. from 3 to 6.5 million years. Sediment velocities are 1.5–1.6 km/s increasing to 1.98 km/s at the basal sediments. Igneous rocks below the sediments are mainly massive, altered diabase with a density of 2.7 g/cm3 and a velocity of 5.2–5.3 km/s, but a fragment of pillow basalt was found at the bottom of the hole.
The margin along the Middle America trench from the Tres Marias Islands to the Manzanillo Area (18°N, 104°W), was uplifted and emergent before the late Miocene. The margin started to subside during the upper Miocene–lower Pliocene at least until the Pliocene–Quaternary limit (Mercier de Lépinay et al. 1997). From the Pliocene–Quaternary limit (approx. 2.5 Ma), the Manzanillo area continue subsiding whereas the Tres Marias Islands began to be uplifted (McCloy et al. 1988). Regional subsidence of an active margin is generally related to tectonic erosion and therefore, such long-term subduction-erosion regimen for the Manzanillo area implies trench retreat along the margin (Mercier de Lépinay et al. 1997). The recent overview of Ramirez-Herrera et al. (2011) confirm that, although spatial and temporal variability exists, coastal subsidence is occurring at the southern Colima Graben and the Guerrero seismic gap near Acapulco, whereas coastal uplift is occurring between Puerto Vallarta and Manzanillo and along the coast south of the Colima/El Gordo Graben until Lazaro Cardenas, South Acapulco.
The Jalisco Block is generally considered as part of the NA Plate may have some degree of independent motion. There are active faults along the Tepic-Chapala, Colima and Chapala rifts in southwestern Mexico that some authors considered related to Jalisco–North America tectonics (Allan 1986; Johnson and Harrison 1989; Allan et al. 1991; Fig. 1). Selvans et al. (2011) find also a slow motion of 2 mm/year to the southwest of the stations in the Jalisco Block relative to the NA Plate in a recent GPS campaign near the triple junction, which is compatible with such a tearing; however, motion could be related to the earthquake cycle behavior of subduction megathrusts and, therefore, the Jalisco Block might not have an independent motion.
Recent studies also evidence gas hydrates in the western (Minshull et al. 2005; Bartolome et al. 2011, 2016; Bandy and Mortera 2012) in the form of bottom simulating reflectors (BSR) on multichannel seismic reflection profile located on the continental slope area of the northern part of the Jalisco Subduction Zone, off Puerto Vallarta, between 20° and 20.5°N, and in the south off Manzanillo. Thus, there is evidence to suggest that the Pacific margin of Mexico may contain significant reserves of hydrocarbons in the form of gas hydrates.
3 TSUJAL Project
The global objective of the TSUJAL project included the characterization of the shallow and deep structure of the Rivera Plate and the Jalisco Block in order to investigate the recent tectonic deformation due to the subduction process affecting the area, and the extensional zones associated with transform faults (Núñez-Cornú et al. 2016). In addition, the data places constraints on the geophysical parameters related to the lithospheric structure in the western Mexican margin (Fig. 1). The integration of these parameters together with the available acquired geological information will allow us to obtain a complete image of the lithosphere that will be used for a seismic and tsunamigenic hazard assessment (Trejo-Gómez et al. 2015).
The specific objectives of TSUJAL survey include characterizing the subduction of the Rivera Plate along the western Mexican margin, clarifying the convergence direction and angle of subduction, in the oceanic crust, the trench, the continental slope and rise and up to the coast. In addition, to identify the active structures, mainly faults, with recent neotectonic deformations that are prone for generating earthquakes and tsunamis. There has been a substantial effort in the project to image the shallow geometry, pattern and style of deformation of the morphological structures using high-resolution methods, and the correlation with its seafloor topography. Finally, we plan to identify and typify mass transport deposits and submarine landslides associate to active faults, emphasizing the ones that can generate earthquakes and tsunamis. TSUJAL data were acquired (Bartolome et al. 2015) in the framework of a bi-lateral barter agreement between the National Environmental Research Council (NERC) and Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Cientificas (CSIC), under the European research alliance OFEG (Ocean Facility Exchange Group).
4 Methods
In this section, we outline the acquisition, processing and modeling of seismic and bathymetric data used in this work.
4.1 Multichannel Seismic Reflection Data
The TSUJAL survey focused on the acquisition of Multichannel Seismic Reflection (MCS) data using a 5.85-km-long digital streamer of the Unidad de Tecnología Marina (UTM—CSIC, Spain) and the airgun source system from the RRS James Cook (NERC, UK), which includes 12 Bolt® G-Guns 1500LL with 4 air compressors and a laboratory equipped to control the firing and synchronization of guns (Fig. 4). A big source array was designed to maximize the energy concentrated at the lowest frequency range. The shooting interval was defined at 50 m, as a compromise between maximum redundancy of data (CMP fold) and capacity of the air compressors (Table 1). During the entire marine seismic survey we applied the Precautionary Principle following the guide recommendations of Joint Nature Conservation Committee. Thus, the safety distance was determined to be 1000 m from the guns and only on a couple of occasions marine mammals and turtles were sighted causing the acquisition operations to be stopped.
A total of 14 MCS profiles were acquired between 108° and 104°W and 17.5° and 22°N. Herein we present the northern MCS network of profiles acquired around the Tres Marias Islands, at the NW of Bahia Banderas (Fig. 5a), which amounts to a total of seven MCS profiles of about 620 km length (Table 2).
4.2 Refraction and Wide-Angle Seismic Data
The TSUJAL experiment used 16 short period Ocean Bottom Seismometers OBS model LC2000SP (1 hydrophone and three components seismometer) designed and built by the Scripps Oceanographic Institution (La Jolla, USA) and provided by the Marine Technology Unit (UTM-CSIC). We used a source that consisted of 14 air guns, in a six array configuration, with a total volume of 6800 cubic inches, towed at 15 m depth, shooting every 120 s along each line. A network of 6 wide-angle (WA) profiles was recorded, in the region around the Maria Islands, by 16 OBSs at 32 locations, in Jalisco and Nayarit offshore regions, as well as on a terrestrial network (100 portable seismic stations) in 240 locations across 5 seismic profiles of 200–300 km in length combined with the Seismological Network of the State of Jalisco (RESAJ, Núñez-Cornú et al. 2016). Figure 5b shows the location of these lines and the location of the OBSs along each line. In this work, we present offshore WAS data of lines RTS-IM01 (95 km) and RTS-IM02 (225 km). WAS data along transect RTS-IM01 were acquired by 4 OBSs, whereas 6 OBSs were used to record data along line RTS-IM02. The average receiver spacing between OBS was ~20 km. Processing of WAS data involved a band pass filter (3–7; 20–25 Hz), and a deconvolution and a wiener shaping filter (prediction lag of 60 ms) in order to retrieve far-offset signal. After the processing we were able to identify arrival times up to 100–120 km offset.
In Figs. 6 and 7, we display the records sections, together with the seismic phases identified and consequent ray tracing used along both lines RTS-IM01 and RTS-IM02 with a reduction velocity of 8 km/s. The phases used for the modeling correspond to P-waves refracted through the overriding plate (Pgc), oceanic crust (Pgo) (which is clearly identified as a first arrival until 40 km offset) and mantle (Pn) (first arrival are observed at far offsets until more than 100 km), and near offset reflections at the intraplate boundary (PiP), and the higher amplitude reflection at the Moho (PmP) some of which are observed at a relatively near offset range (~30 km). Overall, a total of ~1600 and 3800 travel times were manually selected from receiver gathers of lines RTS-IM01 and RTS-IM02, respectively. For these picked travel times, errors are supposed to be half a period of the dominant frequency of the recorded signal, thus, that we use an uncertainty of 50 ms for the travel time of crustal refracted phases (Pg), and for longer offset; of 60–80 ms for mantle refractions (Pn), and of 90–100 ms for intraplate and Moho reflections (PiP and PmP). The uncertainty is chosen on the basis of the signal-to-noise ratio, which correlated with the offset (i.e., the signal-to-noise ratio decreases with offset).
The selected travel times were then inverted using the joint refraction-reflection travel-time tomography method published in Korenaga et al. (2000). This method uses a set of velocity and depth smoothing constraints defined by correlation lengths (CL) to stabilize the iterative inversion. After several tests, we used velocity CL that varies between 3 km at the top of the model to 15 km at the bottom for horizontal CL, and between 0.5 and 5 km for vertical CL. Depth CL was set at 5 km.
To obtain the final models (Fig. 8), we have followed a layer stripping strategy, which is commonly used in crustal tomography approaches as it allows to retrieve the geometry of the main geological interfaces in detail (e.g., intraplate and Moho; Sallarès et al. 2013a). This strategy consists of inverting seismic phases sequentially from near to far offset. The number of steps depends on the number reflections (i.e., layers) interpreted along each profile. This way, inversion of line RTS-IM02 has consisted of three steps: first we inverted both overriding crust first arrivals (Pgc) and reflections at the intraplate boundary (PiP), second we inverted Pgc together with oceanic crust first arrivals (Pgo) and Moho reflections (PmP), and finally, in the third and last step we inverted all the previous refractions together with Moho reflections and mantle refractions (i.e., Pgc, Pgo, Pn and PmP). The final root mean square values for model RTS-IM01 and RTS-IM02 are ~45 and ~50 ms, respectively.
4.2.1 Model Parameter Uncertainty
The uncertainty of the model parameters (Vp, depth) in crust for both profiles (RTS-IM01 and RTS-IM02) has been evaluated by means of a Monte Carlo analysis following a similar approach as Korenaga et al. (2000). A total of 200 Monte Carlo different tests were used in this approach.
Initial Vp models were built following a two-layered structure. The upper layer velocity gradient was set by velocities of 1.5 km/s at the top (seafloor) to 5 km/s at its bottom, whereas the lower layer gradient was defined by velocities between 5.5 km/s at the top to 7 km/s at the bottom. The upper layer thickness was randomly chosen between values of 1 km to 3 km, while a range of 8 km and 12 km was set to choose the thickness of the lower layer. Upper and lower velocities of each layer were randomly varied within 10 %. The initial set of 200 flat Moho reflectors were randomly set at depths between 13 km and 17 km. Overall, the initial Vp uncertainty was set at 0.3 km/s, while the depth uncertainty was ~2 km. The set of 200 perturbed data set were created by randomly modifying the selected travel time within their uncertainties, that is 50 ms for Pg and 90 ms for PmP. Additionally, velocity and depth CL were also randomly chosen, similar to Korenaga and Sager (2012), varying between 3 km and 15 km, from top to bottom for CL horizontal, and between 0.5 km and 5 km for CL vertical (op. cit.)
According to Tarantola (1987), the velocity and depth standard deviation of the number of successfully inverted models can be taken as a measure of the model parameter uncertainty. The results of inverting 200 Monte Carlo realizations are shown in Fig. 9 for both models. The derivative weight sum (DWS) is also included in Fig. 9, which gives accurateness on the linear sensitivity of the inversion (Toomey and Foulger 1989).
The crustal Vp uncertainty for both lines RTS-IM01 and RTS-IM02 varies between 0.1 km/s and 0.2 km/s, being <0.1 km/s in areas with high ray density (Fig. 9). A high uncertainty exists (up to 0.5 km/s) in the first 2–3 km of the model. This is commonly observed in regions with high vertical Vp gradients like the crust–mantle or the sediments–basement boundary (Sallarès et al. 2013b). The depth uncertainty for the Moho reflector has uncertainties between 0.8 and 0.5 km along Line RTS-IM01, and 0.2–1.25 km along Line RTS-IM02. The overall crustal velocity structure and depth of the Moho along both models is significantly well resolved despite of the high receiver spacing (~20 km).
4.3 Swath-Bathymetry Acquisition and Processing
During the TSUJAL (JC-098) cruise high-resolution swath-bathymetry and backscatter data were acquired with two Kongsberg Simrad’s multibeam echosounder, hull-mounted in the RSS James Cook: EM120 and EM710. The EM120 was running during the whole cruise and the EM710 only in shallow waters (<500 m). The nominal sonar frequency for the EM120 is 12 kHz with an angular coverage sector of up to 150 degrees and 191 beams per ping as narrow as 1 degree. Achievable swath width on a flat bottom will normally be up to 5.5 times the water depth. The EM710 operates at sonar frequencies in the 70–100 kHz range with an angular coverage sector of up to 140° and 128 beams. Both echosounders were operated simultaneously with a hydrographic echosounders Simrad EA600. To avoid interferences all echosounders were triggered by a Kongsberg K-Sync V1.7.0 synchronization unit. We calibrated the sound velocity in the water column every day by performing XBT probes.
Due of the characteristics of this cruise, most of the lines were covered up to four times, including: during the deployment of OBS; while shooting refraction line; during recovery of OBS and finally while firing for the MCS seismic reflection data acquisition. This has conditioned the strategy of the multibeam acquisition data and data density, which can reach up to more than 2000 values/km2 in lines, sailed up to five times or when shallow bathymetric profiles were recorded with two echosounders simultaneously.
All bathymetric data recorded has been processed on board using CARIS (Hips & Sips v. 8.1). Processing steps include navigation editor for ping removal corresponding to the stop time during deployment and recovering of OBS sensors and filtering of sections acquired at speeds lower than 2 knots. Soundings were also filtered with the “Swath Editor” command to remove the most obvious bad or/and isolated sounds. Then, the whole base surface is systematically inspected and cleaned with the “2D Subset editor” command.
5 Oceanic Crustal Structure
5.1 Significance of the MCS, Refraction and Wide-Angle Data
The northernmost MCS profile, TS09b (Fig. 5a), strikes SW–NE for 120 km. It is located about 30 km north of the Tres Marias Islands (TMI) at the eastern flank of the Tres Marias escarpment (TME). In the migrated section of profile TS09b (Fig. 10) there is a basin up (between marks 95–110 km) to 15 km wide, infilled by up to 1 s (twtt) of sediments, which runs parallel to the TME. From its location and shape, this basin appears to be formed by a half graben, the main fault located to the NE. This basin may have been developed coincident with the collision of the Rivera Plate as a pull-apart basin or by block rotation in an oblique subduction system, that is compatible with the structural transform regime during the last 5.5 my, and basically overlaps the older extensional tectonics (Moore and Curray 1982). Some compressional structures are observed near the eastern flank of the TME. In the western flank of TME we observe some faults that could be related to the faulting and rifting processes in the early stages of initial axis along the Maria Magdalena Rise (MMR), this is reinforced by NNE trending magnetic anomalies, which record the early opening between the southern tip of Baja California peninsula and western Mexico (Lonsdale 1991).
In this initial extensional period extensive rifting of the continental crust occurred at the tip of the Peninsula and in the conjugate Tres Marias Block. Then, rifting aborted leaving remnants of continental fragments, dyke injection and rapid subsidence at the site of Marina Magdalena Rise. The velocity model obtained from the wide-angle profile, RTS-IM01, coincident with the MCS (Figs. 8, 9), shows a thin crust (~6–7 km) in the TME with a slight progressive thickening underneath the TMI. The MCS profile TS13 (Fig. 11), which runs parallel to the TS09b 60 km southwards, is a short profile 62 km long ending at the mouth of the strait between Maria Magdalena and Maria Cleofas Islands. The noticeable feature of this profile is that we clearly observe an incipient subducted slab from Rivera Plate with a not yet completely developed accretionary prism, and a narrow trench of 6.0 km, providing a strong indication that the northern subduction of the Rivera Plate stops nearby.
The southern MCS stacked profile, TS11 (Fig. 12) of about 120 km length shows a complex deformation front, most probably due to the oblique subduction, profile TS11 crosscuts a lineated N–S tectonic structure (named Sierra Cleofas by Nuñez et al. 2016), that can be traced for almost 100 km in the bathymetry, from south of Marias Islands. This uplifted structure shows a segmented flower-structure consistent with strike slip faulting parallel to the margin. Nuñez et al. (2016) analyze most of the significant structural lineaments in the area, offshore and onshore, and conclude that the main observed trends are NW–SE and N–S. The interplate contact between the Rivera and NA Plates is observed as a strong dipping reflection at 6 s two-way travel time (TWTT).
Offshore Puerto Vallarta, the MCS data (TS06b) reveals high-amplitude reflections at around 7–8.5 s TWTT, roughly 2.5–3.5 s TWTT below the seafloor, that conspicuously define the bending morphology of the Rivera Plate at this latitude. These strong reflections have been interpreted as the Moho discontinuity.
The profile that crosses orthogonally all the three above-mentioned MCS profiles, TS08 (Fig. 13), runs parallel to the TMI for a length of 120 km and crosses the MMR. This seismic section clearly illustrates the bending of the Rivera Plate subducting underneath the Jalisco Block. The wide-angle profile RTS-IM02 is coincident with TS08 MCS section (Fig. 14) and shows a mean crustal thickness for the oceanic domain of less than 10 km, and noticeable low velocity layers immediately underneath the MMR (Figs. 8, 9), coinciding with high heat flow values (Prol-Ledesma et al. 1989). A similar relation between seismic velocities and heat flow values is observed in the mid-ocean ridges (e.g., Lau Basin; Dunn et al. 2013), where both low velocities and thermal anomaly are related to the presence of melt. These anomalous layers, of a mean thickness of 3.0 km and low seismic velocities with respect to the neighboring crust could have been formed during the overlapping spreading center (OSC) between MMR and EPR ~3.5 Myr ago. The OSC could act as a trap where magma stagnates, which would lead to an increase of the thickness in the extrusive layer and the bulk of the porosity of the upper crust (Bazin et al. 2001) giving a plausible explanation to the anomalous layer geometry. An analogous pattern has been reported beneath overlap relict basins in the EPR (Canales et al. 2003).
5.2 Bathymetric Features
The surveyed continental slope westward of Tres Marias islands is characterized by steep slopes that range from about 500 m water depth to 4164 m and mean slope gradients of about 12.5° (Fig. 15). Locally, peaks of more than 25° are observed between the Maria Magdalena and Maria Cleofas islands presents several arcuate scarps developed in the upper slope and identified as blue lines in Fig. 15b. These structures indicate an area where failures are ubiquitous. The complexity of their headwalls and its relationship suggest a multi-event origin. The continental slope in front of the Maria Magdalena Island presents the biggest landslide scars reaching up to 7.2 km wide and covering an area of 41.5 km2 (Fig. 15). Downslope, the seafloor are characterized by several lobular surfaces that represent mass-wasting deposits related with upslope scars (colored areas in Fig. 15b). The areal distribution and size of such deposits indicate that the slope off Maria Magdalena Island presents the larger instability events. In this sense, and related with the biggest scar, a lobular uneven surface of 112 km2 develops (Fig. 15). Its roughness and dimensions suggest the existence of a huge mass-wasting deposit containing several blocks (the biggest 1.7 × 0.9 km). This configuration resembles debris avalanche deposits identified in volcanic margins (Gee et al. 2001; Chiocci and de Alteriis 2006) or subduction zones (von Huene et al. 2004) where predominate steep gradients and slope instability are inherent.
6 Conclusions
Newly acquired seismic data illuminate the complex interactions between Rivera and North American plates, giving insights of the geodynamics at the northern edge of these plates.
We have identified in the MCS sections the collision zone between the Rivera and North American plates in the region of the Tres Marias Islands, which shows noteworthy differences from north to south. North of Tres Marias Islands there is no clear indication of an active subduction zone, instead we observe faulting at the west flank of the Tres Marias Islands, while southwards between Maria Magdalena and Maria Cleofas Islands, we clearly observe the subducted slab of the Rivera Plate with an incipient accretionary prism indicating near termination of the subduction zone. At the southwest edge of the Tres Marias islands the seismic images show unequivocally the Rivera Plate slab subducting underneath Jalisco Block. The subducted Moho is observed at the Rivera Plate, in the southern profile TS11 perpendicular to the North American Plate as a clear bending interface from the outer trench at 8.0 s (TWTT) to 8.4 s TWTT underneath the MAT (Fig. 12). The crustal velocity structure and depth of the Moho along RTS-IM01 and RTS-IM02 profiles is significantly well resolved despite the high receiver spacing (~20 km), as shown in the Monte Carlo analysis. The RMS travel time misfit for the final models (i.e., RTS-IM01 and RTS-IM02) is 40 ms and 50 ms, respectively (Fig. 8). The modeling and interpretation of WA data show a mean crustal thickness for the oceanic slab of 6–7 km, and several relatively low conspicuous crustal velocity variations (≲5.5 km/s) underneath MMR, that could indicate an excess of melting material feeding from the extinct overlapping spreading center, and a progressive crustal thickening towards the Jalisco Block. While the Moho depth varies from 10 km westward TMI, to more than 15 km at the start of collision zone between Rivera Plate and Jalisco Block. Superficial faulting and mass-wasting deposits indicated by the bathymetric data, denotes recent (quaternary) activity west of the TMI. The Tres Marias Escarpment is characterized by steep slopes reaching gradients up to 12.5°, between the Maria Magdalena and Maria Cleofas islands arcuate scarps developed in the upper slope, favoring failures and significant landslides, as the identified landslide, such scars at the foot of Maria Magdalena Island that extends for almost 42 km2, containing blocks up to 2.5 km2. At continental slope margins typically gradients of only 1°–5° can produce large scale failures, so slope instability in the area are certainly favored and possibly triggered by the local seismicity. MB and SBP data show indications of compression, west of Marias Islands, suggested by deformation of sedimentary wedges and elevation of the Islands (Fig. 15).
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Acknowledgments
This research was supported by TSUJAL (Crustal characterization of the Rivera Plate–Jalisco Block boundary and its implications for seismic and tsunami hazard assessment, funded by the Spanish National Agency (Ref. CGL2011-29474-C02-01) and “Ramon y Cajal” program (R. Bartolome). The Government of Jalisco State has also funding for this project with various funds CONACYT–FOMIXJAL 2008–96567 (2009); CON- 848, CONACYT–FOMIXJAL 2008–96539 (2009); 849, CONACYT–FOMIXJAL 2010–149245 (2011); 850, CONACyT-FOMIXJal (2012-08-189963) and also 851, partial funding was provided by UNAM DGAPA 852 Grant #IN115513-3 and CABO Project JGAP2013,and UNAM DGAPA Grant #IN114602.. The Mexican Army provided the vessel ARM HOLZINGER for the environmental assessment and companion vessel for the multichannel seismic acquisition during the survey. We acknowledge the technical staff at UTM-CSIC, NERC, and crew of RSS JAMES COOK, Holzinger and the Mexican SEMAR and the support of the Mexican Instituto Oceanográfico del Pacífico in Manzanillo for their help during the entire cruise.
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Dañobeitia, J., Bartolomé, R., Prada, M. et al. Crustal Architecture at the Collision Zone Between Rivera and North American Plates at the Jalisco Block: Tsujal Project. Pure Appl. Geophys. 173, 3553–3573 (2016). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00024-016-1388-7
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00024-016-1388-7