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A density model of the Andean subduction zone T. V. ROMANYUK, Institute of Physics of the Earth, Moscow, Russia H.-J. GÖTZE, Freie Universität Berlin, Germany P. F. HALVORSON, consulting geophysicist, Boulder Creek, California, U.S. D ensity changes in “basement” rock or the deeper crust tend to cause gravity anomalies that dominate the observed data. Now that oil companies have begun using airborne gravity in their exploration of remote regions of the Andes, interpreters are building detailed earth models, which necessarily involve geologically constrained gravity “regional fields” to account for the overwhelming signal from deep crustal structure. The tectonic model in this paper crosses Bolivia’s hydrocarbon production and its epithermal silver-tin deposits. In northern Chile, the model passes through the Quebrada Blanca and Collahuasi porphyry copper deposits, just north of the Chuquicamata porphyry copper deposit along the Domeyko Cordillera. With the stakes high, budgets low, and exploration costs soaring, the less expensive airborne geophysical techniques, gravity and magnetics, are being utilized in advance of the hugely expensive seismic crews. During the last decade a project titled “Deformation Processes in the Andes” has undertaken new geo- physical investigations on the Andean subduction zone. A goal of the project is to validate a regional, crustal model for the Andes as thoroughly as possible. The main components in these studies are: (1) seismic refraction; (2) gravity; (3) reflection seismic; and (4) electromagnetics. These, along with other existing data, have been integrated with geologic data to compile a 2-D model combining geologic, geophysical, and tectonic information along a line at 21° S. This paper concerns part of the project: compiling density parameters for the model. Most convergent zones of the earth are conceived as oceanic plates subducting beneath immovable or stable continents. However, we believe that the Andean subduction zone is an entire region (both oceanic and continental) that is moving downward into the earth. The movement of the material is strongly asymmetrical. The oceanic Nazca Plate is moving horizontally about 10 cm/y near the trench. The cratonic central part of South America (the Brazilian Craton) is estimated to move at about 1 cm/y. The subduction inland and downward of continental lithosphere Figure 1. Geophysical model of the Andean crust. Seismic velocities are shown by numbers, densities by color. 264 THE LEADING EDGE FEBRUARY 1999 can explain the nature of the thickened (up to 70 km) Andean crust. The Andean mountain system has been forming under a strong compressive regime due to large-scale deformation and the accumulation of light crustal material over a sinking root that consists of dense lower-continental crust and upper mantle of the Brazilian Craton and Nazca Plate. The surface geology and geodynamics of the Andean mountain belt differ dramatically from neighboring regions (Figure 1). The westernmost oceanic crust, the trench, the coast range, and the Chaco Plain are characterized by subhorizontal boundaries in the upper crust, negligible vertical movement, and low heat flow. The coastal range seems to have been stable since the Jurassic, and the Brazilian Craton since the Proterozoic. On the other hand, the Andes, which have had active tectonics since the Miocene, display near-vertical and oblique faults, geologic discontinuities, high vertical movement, high heat flow, and active volcanism. Compilation of the model and gravity modeling. New geologic and seismic data have been combined with previous density models to compile an initial layer-block scheme for the Andean crust (Figure 1). A model of crustal and mantle density (Figure 2) is produced with a linear gravity inversion technique. Densities are constrained where possible by seismic velocities and acoustic logs. We assume that the lithosphere is close to isostatic equilibrium at a depth of 300 km in the deep ocean and beneath the Eastern Cordillera. The main features of the Andean lithosphere model are: 1) The upper crust was formed on or near Proterozoic basement, as a broad, back-arc marine sedimentary basin during Ordovician and Devonian time. Between Ordovician and Oligocene time, the basin was affected by short episodes of orogenesis (rifting, minor sedimentation, and segmentation). FEBRUARY 1999 THE LEADING EDGE 0000 Figure 2. Density model of the Andean subduction zone. Densities are shown by numbers in each block; dual numbers indicate a vertical gradational density within the block. Observed (Bouguer anomaly over continent regions and free-air anomaly over the ocean) and calculated gravity curves are shown; the axis is located at left. Relative hydrostatic pressure curves at the depth of 300 km for ocean west of the trench and for continent beneath the 266 THE LEADING EDGE FEBRUARY 1999 FEBRUARY 1999 THE LEADING EDGE 0000 The upper crust is shaped like a lens, thickening up to 20-25 km beneath the Cordillera mountain belt and thinning at the edges near the coast and the Subandean thrust. The marine sediments which have been affected by tectonic deformation are seen in the Eastern Cordillera and Subandean ranges with density = 2.6-2.7 g/cm3. Metamorphism and magmas of the volcanic arc affect the sediments that make up the coast, Western Cordillera, and Altiplano, with density = 2.65-2.8 g/cm3. 2) The high-velocity layer (HVL) (6.4-6.8 km/s; 5 km thick) at the base of the upper crust can be interpreted as a relict of the basaltic-gabbroic oceanic crust with a density of 2.9-3.0 g/cm3. This layer is thought to be much more rigid and less deformable than others. This is why it plays an important role in the redistribution of the deformation and the accumulation of stresses. 3) A part of the sedimentary basin between the ocean and Western Cordillera was underthrust by a volcanic island arc complex, presumably in the Late Jurassic, creating a double layer of volcanosedimentary crust. It has high seis- 0000 THE LEADING EDGE FEBRUARY 1999 mic velocity (about 6.4 km/s) and high density (about 2.9 g/cm3). 4) The structure of the crust at the transition from the Subandean ranges to the Chaco Plain is not imaged by seismic data. Thus, the model has a very simple conventional layered crust. The bottom of the sedimentary basin is estimated from density modeling. 5) Beginning in the Oligocene, the crust beneath the Eastern Cordillera and Subandean ranges has been thickening due to underthrusting of the Brazilian Craton. The oblique contact between the top of the Brazilian Craton and the HVL is prominent in seismic reflection data. We believe that the rigid end of the HVL acts as a plow, scraping off the sediments from the moving Brazilian Craton. These sediments mix and deform together with the Ordovician and Silurian marine sediments, producing thin-skin tectonic structures of the Subandean ranges. 6) The dominant deformation regime is crustal shortening. This is estimated, beginning from Late Cretaceous, at 300 km, including 150 km of post-Oligocene shortening. This means that the Brazilian Craton should have moved westward at least up to the Altiplano. We propose that the Brazilian Craton moves like a rigid indivisible body beneath the Subandean ranges, but beneath the Eastern Cordillera the layers of the crust move independently. The upper crust continues to move like a rigid body (it is approximately outlined by a concentration of seismic reflections). The dense high-pressure metamorphic fraction implies that the lower part of the crust is sinking into the mantle. The middle layers begin to behave in a fluidlike manner, folding into 30-60 km of material. 7) We propose that the bottom of the underthrusting Brazilian Craton does not coincide with the present-day seismic refraction Moho between the Altiplano Plateau and the Eastern Cordillera but is located lower. The lack of a refraction Moho beneath the Eastern Cordillera is due to a partial eclogitization or other high-pressure metamorphic transformations which increase density and seismic velocity up to mantle values in the lower layer of the downwardly mobilized Brazilian Craton. FEBRUARY 1999 THE LEADING EDGE 267 Additional information concerning the geophysical database, topographic grids, geologic maps, abstracts, and the organization and services of Berlin’s Collaborative Research Center 267 is at: http://userpage.fu-berlin.de/~data/Welcome.html or http://userpage.fu-berlin.de/~geoinfhb/Welcome.html The USGS National Earthquake Information Center map of seismicity of South America from 1975 to 1995 includes color-coded depths of earthquakes: http://wwwneic.cr.usgs.gov/neis/general/seismicity/s_america.html Current earthquakes (within the last five days) may be viewed on a similar map of South America with uncluttered shaded terrain as a “base” map: 8) The present-day volcanic arc in the Western Cordillera is bounded by near-vertical fault zones. Together with other inner faults and deep reflective boundaries, they outline a so-called “flower structure.” No marked horizontal density changes were obtained inside this structure. The nature of this structure can be interpreted as a squeezing out of material from the inner parts of the “flower” to the surface. The base of the flower structure is expected to be a point of relaxation of the stresses. 9) The geologic styles in the Western and Eastern Cordilleras and the crustal structures beneath them differ. The common element is an accumulation of the material in the upper crust over the rigidly subsiding HVL. Although the Altiplano stands 3.7 km above sea level, it is thought to be a sedimentary basin between these mountain systems. It has been forming due to the subsidence of the HVL and the relative uplift of the neighboring Western and Eastern Cordillera. 10) A refraction seismic Moho was not observed beneath the present-day Western Cordillera or Altiplano. Moreover, seismic investigations do not show any layered structures in the middle and lower crust. Electromagnetic investigations show a sharp decrease in resistivity. Gravity modeling did not show any marked horizontal density changes. The average density was .1 g/cm 3 higher than the density of the Brazilian Craton’s middle crust. Thus, we propose that the dominant process here is modern magmatic activity, which has erased earlier structures. We interpret the middle and lower crust and the uppermost mantle as an accumulation of material strongly affected by magma, reworked by metamorphism, and deformed in a fluidlike manner. A depth of 70 km (an average of estimates for quartzcoesite transformation) has been adopted as a conventional crust/ mantle boundary. This is supported by the calculation of the isostatic Moho. The model of the subducted Nazca Plate and the mantle edge. The oceanic crust of the subducting Nazca Plate (~30-40 million years in age) is approximated by two layers: a basaltic layer 2 with density 2.8 g/cm3 and a gabbroic layer 3 with density 2.95 g/cm3. At 20 km, layer 2 is believed to be wedged, because pores in the basalts are thought to be closed due to high pressure, so the density must be close to that of the gabbros. The mantle of the Nazca Plate is believed to be harzburgite grading with depth into spinel her- 268 THE LEADING EDGE FEBRUARY 1999 zolite with an average density of 3.34 g/cm3. The boundary of the asthenosphere with the Nazca Plate near the western coast of South America is not imaged seismically, probably a result of the similar densities and velocities. The most active area of continental and oceanic plate contact is considered to be between the trench and the volcanic arc. Dehydration and metamorphism (most importantly basalt-eclogite) in the subducted oceanic crust are proposed here. Two processes have the greatest effect on the gravity modeling: (1) increasing density in the downgoing slab, and (2) distortion of the mantle edge by the release of slab fluid, causing wet melting of the mantle edge peridotites, forming a volcanic arc. The upper mantle beneath the Andes has three parts: the light mantle cones (3.2 g/cm3), the dense, sinking root of the Andean lithosphere (3.4 g/cm3), and the “normal” continental mantle of the Brazilian Craton (3.36 g/cm3). The densities in the mantle in the 200-670 km depth range are fixed in accordance with the standard columns proposed by Dziewonski and Anderson (1981) and Lerner-Lam and Jordan (1987). Further work. This paper constitutes a “parts list” for a rigorous geophysical model of Andean tectonics. Beyond this gravity work our research will strive to understand crustal dynamics by tracking down the mechanism (stress data) that is gleaned from the directional aspects of the recorded seismicity. Lithospheric stresses will be calculated from the integrated gravity model we have described, and they will be compared with observed seismicity. This helps back up the gravity model concerning the forces involved in the plate motions. Suggestions for further reading. The articles cited in this text, and many others, can be found on the Web site organized by SEG’s Gravity and Magnetics Committee at http://seg.org/ comm-info/grav_mag/. Acknowledgments: We thank Regina Patzwahl who provided results of gravity group D3 of the Collaborative Research Center 267. “Deformation Processes in the Andes” is a project funded under grants to Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) and Freie Universität Berlin. Corresponding author: T. Romanyuk, [email protected] FEBRUARY 1999 THE LEADING EDGE 0000