Modeling Trench Sediment‐Controlled Flow in Subduction Channels: Implications for the Topographic Evolution of the Central Andean Fore Arc

Nicolas Cosentino, Jason Morgan, Terry Jordan

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Abstract

The high elevation of the onshore forearc platform in northern Chile cannot be accounted for by previously proposed tectonic mechanisms such as coastal underplating and coseismic deformation, whose topographic effects are restricted to the coastal zone. Subduction channels have been recognized both in modern and fossil non‐collisional convergent margins, yet their role on forearc surface elevation has not been sufficiently explored. Long‐term viscoelastic flow in a strengthened, finite‐thickness subduction channel promotes coupled offshore forearc subsidence and onshore forearc platform uplift. We propose that the onset of protracted hyperaridity in the coastal zone of northern Chile starved the trench of sediments, inducing a rise in shear stress at the top of the subduction channel sufficient to trigger hundreds of meters of uplift of the onshore forearc basin surface, most of which took place by the middle Miocene. This is consistent with latitudinal correlations between coastal precipitation, trench sediment thickness and onshore forearc topography along the Chilean margin, and with available paleoclimatic and paleotopographic evidence in northern Chile.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)9121-9135
Number of pages15
JournalJournal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth
Volume123
Issue number10
Early online date26 Sept 2018
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Oct 2018

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