Special Issue dedicated to Francisco Hervé: Global tectonic processes of the ancient southwestern Gondwana margin in South America and the Antarctic Peninsula
Edited by:
- Mauricio Calderón, PhD, Universidad del Desarrollo, Chile
- Paula Castillo, PhD, Universität Münster, Deutschland
- Robert Pankhurst, PhD ScD, United Kingdom
Submission status: Extended until September 30, 2025
Special Issue: Geoethics in Chile and Latin America - Contextual reflections for responsible geoscience
Edited by:
- Luisa Pinto, Universidad de Chile
- Hernán Bobadilla, Politecnico di Milano
- Tania Villaseñor, Pontificia Universidad Católica de Chile
- Pablo Ramírez, Universidad de Chile
- Millarca Valenzuela, Universidad Católica del Norte
Submission status: Open between August 15, 2025, and March 31, 2026
Segmentation, kinematics and relative chronology of the late deformation of Salar del Carmen Fault, Atacama Fault System (23°40'S), northern Chile.
Gabriel Gonzalez, Daniel Carrizo
Abstract
The Salar del Carmen Fault is the most important strand of the Atacama Fault System exposed along the eastern border of the Sierra del Ancla. The younger slip event along this fault forms seven consecutive 8 km long north-south striking fault segments that cut Pliocene alluvial fans. The segments show a left stepping geometry, whose terminal parts are linked by transfer faults. The scarps were formed by east-down-dip-parallel slip along subvertical fault planes. The strain state is characterized by a N90E trending and 33° plunging extensional axis a N87W trending and 56° plunging shortening axis. Ruptures along the fault form 0.2-9 m high fault scarps. Older scarps are dominated by debris slope whereas younger scarps are free face dominated. Scarp ages, estimated by morphologic dating, indicate that the scarps are not older than the Late Pleistocene (< 400 Ka). Cracks with centimetric down-the-dip displacement were formed during the last subduction earthquake (Antofagasta, 30th de July 1995, Mw=8.1. This demonstrates that the Atacama Fault System experiences coseismic reactivation during large subduction earthquakes. Greater vertical slip documented along the Salar del Carmen Fault are interpreted to be triggered by subduction earthquakes with Mw >8.0.