Skip to main navigation Skip to search Skip to main content

Crustal structure of the Western Azuero Peninsula, Panama: Insights into the structure of accretionary complexes and forearc ophiolites

  • Carolina Ortiz-Guerrero (Creator)
  • Camilo Montes (Creator)
  • David W. Farris (Creator)
  • Catalina Agudelo (Creator)
  • Margarita Ariza acero (Creator)
  • Juliana Ayala (Creator)
  • Jose David Avellaneda (Creator)
  • Alejandro Cortes-Calderon (Creator)
  • Esteban Gaitan (Creator)
  • Sebastian Garzon (Creator)
  • Daniel Gongora-Blanco (Creator)
  • Nubia Andrea Jara (Creator)
  • Juan Camilo Meza-Cala (Creator)
  • Lina Perez-Angel (Creator)
  • Nathalia Pineda-Rodríguez (Creator)
  • Alejandro Rodriguez-Parra (Creator)
  • Billy Revelo-Obando (Creator)
  • Carolina Rubiano (Creator)
  • Elena Stiles (Creator)
  • Maria Paz Urdaneta (Creator)
  • Nicolas Zuluaga (Creator)
  • Felipe Lamus (Creator)
  • Federico Moreno (Creator)
  • Aldo Rincon (Creator)

Dataset

Description

Detailed geologic mapping (639 field stations in ~700 km<sup>2</sup>) and a ~50 km-long gravity survey (142 stations) in the western Azuero Peninsula revealed two faulted and folded slivers of oceanic crust attached to the trailing edge of the Caribbean Large Igneous Plateau (CLIP). Our new data, along with published geochronology, allowed us to reconstruct the Cretaceous forearc configuration of the trailing edge of the CLIP prior to seamount collision, ophiolite accretion, and whole-margin deformation. The ophiolite in western Azuero is composed of two tectonic slivers arranged in south-verging, imbricated thrust faults that stack a ~73 Ma pillow, flow, and picritic basalt and black chert, together with a ~ 89–93 Ma and older basalt flows and capping red chert sequences. Accretion of these slivers to form a supra-subduction zone ophiolite resulted from the middle Eocene collision and accretion of Galapagos seamounts against the trailing edge of the CLIP. Accreted seamounts are arranged in a north-verging antiformal stack duplex, and below the thrust sheets. Change in kinematics after fission of the Cocos-Nazca Plate during early Miocene times prompted the propagation of the Azuero-Sona fault zone flower structure, favouring the preservation of these slivers of oceanic crust.
Date made available15 Apr 2023
PublisherUniversity of Florida
Geographical coverageWestern Azuero Peninsula

Cite this