Active Faults in Eastern Hispaniola: The Hispaniola-Puerto Rico Microplate Boundary?
Abstract
An extensive tract of limestone of mostly Pleistocene-Recent age covers the Eastern part of the Dominican Republic. Numerous distinctive marine terraces outcrop along the southern and eastern coast, the lowest of which has been dated at about 125Ka. In the eastern area, the highest terrace is about 50m asl, is very variable in elevation, and correlates with a terrace of about 50 m asl along the southern coast. This feature might correlate with a feature of similar height on the Island of Marie Galante in the Lesser Antilles, dated at 250Ka. Manipulation of 3 arc-sec grid of SRTM land data and a 12 arc-sec grid of marine data reveals the location of the upper marine terrace as well as numerous scarps with 10's of meters of relief tending WNW across the region. The 2nd derivative of the relief grid is used to objectively identify the location of the upper terrace, which is compared to the elevation grid to develop an along escarpment profile of terrace elevation. If undisturbed, this feature should be contour parallel, that is all at the same elevation. Systematic elevation changes along profile suggest titling and numerous abrupt vertical (~30-50m) and at least one horizontal offset (375m) of this feature. Terrace displacing scarps can be traced many kilometers from offshore, across the coast paralleling marine terraces, and continuing inland as linear features that I interpret as active normal faults cutting the limestone platform. Five systems of normal faults have been identified in this manner, the longest of which may be capable of generating earthquakes of about magnitude 7-7 1/4. If the age of the upper terrace is roughly about 250Ka, then the observed horizontal displacements of about 375 meters suggest a rate of fault motion on the order of mm"s/yr for each of the5 faults. This total rate of deformation of several mm/yr is similar to the rate of deformation calculated from GPS studies for the rate of motion between the Hispaniola and Puerto Rico microplates, suggesting that much of the inter-microplate motion is not contained to the offshore regions of the Mona Passage, but rather passes on shore in the eastern part of the Dominican Republic.
- Publication:
-
AGU Fall Meeting Abstracts
- Pub Date:
- December 2007
- Bibcode:
- 2007AGUFM.T13C1483M
- Keywords:
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- 1209 Tectonic deformation (6924);
- 7230 Seismicity and tectonics (1207;
- 1217;
- 1240;
- 1242);
- 8010 Fractures and faults;
- 8158 Plate motions: present and recent (3040)