Holocene mass‐wasting events in Lago Fagnano,Tierra del Fuego (54°S): implications for paleoseismicity of the Magallanes‐Fagnano transform fault |
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Authors: | Nicolas Waldmann Flavio S. Anselmetti Daniel Ariztegui James A. Austin Jr Mortaza Pirouz Christopher M. Moy Robert Dunbar |
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Affiliation: | 1. Section of Earth and Environmental Sciences, University of Geneva, Geneva, Switzerland;2. Department of Earth Science, University of Bergen, Bergen, Norway;3. Eawag, Department of Surface Waters, Swiss Federal Institute of Aquatic Science and Technology, Duebendorf, Switzerland;4. Institute for Geophysics, John A. and Katherine G. Jackson School of Geosciences, University of Texas at Austin, TX, USA;5. Geology Department, University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand;6. Department of Geological and Environmental Sciences, Stanford University, Stanford, CA, USA |
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Abstract: | High‐resolution seismic imaging and coring in Lago Fagnano, located along a plate boundary in Tierra del Fuego, have revealed a dated sequence of Holocene mass‐wasting events. These structures are interpreted as sediment mobilizations resulting from loading of the slope‐adjacent lake floor during mass‐flow deposition. More than 19 mass‐flow deposits have been identified, combining results from 800 km of gridded seismic profiles used to site sediment cores. Successions of up to 6‐m thick mass‐flow deposits, pond atop the basin floor and spread eastward and westward following the main axis of the eastern sub‐basin of Lago Fagnano. We developed an age model, on the basis of information from previous studies and from new AMS‐14C ages on cored sediments, which allows us to establish a well‐constrained chronologic mass‐wasting event‐catalogue covering the last ~12 000 years. Simultaneously triggered, basin‐wide lateral slope failure and the formation of multiple debris flow and postulated megaturbidite deposits are interpreted as the fingerprint of paleo‐seismic activity along the Magallanes‐Fagnano transform fault that runs along the entire lake basin. The slope failures and megaturbidites are interpreted as recording large earthquakes occurring along the transform fault since the early Holocene. The results from this study provide new data about the frequency and possible magnitude of Holocene earthquakes in Tierra del Fuego, which can be applied in the context of seismic hazard assessment in southernmost Patagonia. |
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