The El Tigre Fault is a 120 km long, roughly north-south trending,[5] major strike-slip fault located in the Western Precordillera in Argentina.[1][6] The Precordillera lies just to the east of the Andes mountain range in South America.[1] The northern boundary of the fault is the Jáchal River and its southern boundary is the San Juan River.[2] The fault is divided into three sections based on fault trace geometry, Northern extending between 41–46 km in length, Central extending between 48–53 km in length, and Southern extending 26 km in length.[2][5] The fault displays a right-lateral (horizontal) motion and has formed in response to stresses from the Nazca Platesubducting under the South American Plate.[6][7] It is a major fault with crustal significance.[5] The Andes Mountain belt trends with respect to the Nazca Plate/South American Plate convergence zone, and deformation is divided between the Precordilleran thrust faults and the El Tigre strike-slip motion.[5] The El Tigre Fault is currently seismically active.[5]
Geology
El Tigre Fault is a right-lateral N10°E trending fault,[5] known for its good grade of exposures and markers of horizontal displacement.[1] Its linear traces are apparent throughout the length of the fault.[6]Morphology of El Tigre strike-slip fault is visible on the western slope of the Precordillera fold and thrust belt.[6] With evidence of activity during the Middle Pleistocene[1][2] to present day, it is considered a Quaternaryfault.[1]Geomorphic and 10Be (Beryllium) exposure ages have been used in some studies to estimate the Quaternary age and slip rate.[3] Slip rate is estimated to be approximately 1 mm/year[3] and offsets range from 60 to 180 m.[5]
The northern subdivision is approximately 41–46 km long.[2][5] One estimation shows the segment begins where the fault bends to the northeast and is 41 km long.[2] Another estimation places the distinction 5.5 km south of this bend resulting in the northern segment 46 km long.[5] This section is more structurally complex than the central and southern sections, due to the segment's northern edge ending in a horse tail termination.[2] This faulted area can be interpreted from the 1 km to 5 km separation of several disperse rupture strands.[2]
Central
The central subdivision is approximately 48–53 km long.[2][5] This area exhibits transpressive and transtensivegeomorphological features.[1][2]Sag ponds (releasing basins) form when the right lateral fault bends to the left causing the crust to extend (transtensive).[1][2]Pressure ridges form when the right-lateral fault bends to the right causing the crust to compress (transpressive).[1][2] A bedrock scarp with an east-facing slope shows vertical displacement along this part of the fault.[1][2] The scarp has a slope of 18-24° and maximum height of 85 m.[2] Tectonic shortening appears to have changed direction from WSW-ENE to W-E during the Pleistocene, altering the kinematics to the present transpressive/transtensive system from a mainly transcurrent one.[1]
Southern
The southern subdivision is approximately 26 km long.[5] This segment is characterized by the right-lateral offset of drainage networks.[2][3] It exhibits an uninterrupted linear trace and strike-slip component that are useful in determining offset.[2] The termination point for El Tigre in the south is recognized by a merging within the Precordilleran Paleozoic strata, as well as its extremely disturbed surface deformation.[5] By dating the alluvial fans in this segment, some studies conclude a horizontal displacement rate of approximately 1 mm/yr.[2][3] The southern segment along with the central segment are crossed by several oblique and transverse faults almost perpendicular to the El Tigre Fault.[2] These faults are inferred due to the long linear strands of stream channels, as the faults are not visible on the surface.[1][2]
Discrepancies
The faults location in a seismically active zone and a low erosional environment makes it a good study area.[2][3] Although many characteristics of geomorphology have been preserved, the area has not been extensively studied using the new methodologies currently available.[2] The fault has sparked new interest in its geometrical and kinematic characteristics within recent years.[1] Previous studies on the El Tigre Fault have a range of inconstancies. Information obtained on the fault can vary from a reactivated fault with a normal component in Jurassic and Palaeocene,[8][9] an Eocene strike-slip fault,[9][10] an Oligocene northwest-verging thrust fault,[8][11] and a south-east dipping normal fault inverted in the Neogene.[8][12] Research models in the 1980s describe the fault as system anywhere from 800 km up to 1000 km in length.[2][5] The kinematics, geometry, extension, and deformation have not been widely agreed upon,[2] therefore the new interest in the El Tigre Fault should lead to further studies using modern technology. These future studies should shed light on the discrepancies that have resulted from lack of in depth information in the past.[1][2]
References
^ abcdefghijklmnoFazzito, S.; Rapalini, A.; Cortes, J.; Terrizzano, C. (2011). "Kinematic study in the area of the Quaternary oblique-slip El Tigre fault, Western Precordillera, Argentina, on the basis of paleomagnetism and anisotropy of magnetic susceptibility". Latinmag Letters. 1 (B24): 1–5.
^ abcdefSiame, L.; Bourles, D.; Sebrier, M.; Bellier, O.; Castano, J.C.; Araujo, M.; Perez, M.; Raisbeck, G.; Yiou, F. (1997). "Cosmogenic dating ranging from 20 to 700 ka of a series of alluvial fan surfaces affected by the El Tigre fault, Argentina". Geology. 25 (11): 975. Bibcode:1997Geo....25..975S. doi:10.1130/0091-7613(1997)025<0975:cdrftk>2.3.co;2.
^ abcdefghijklmnopSiame, L.; Sebrier, M.; Bellier, O.; Bourles, D.; Castano, J.C.; Aurojo, M.; Yiou, F.; Raisbeck, G. (September 1996). Segmentation and horizontal slip rate estimation of the El Tigre fault zone, San Juan Province (Argentina) from SPOT images analysis. Third ISAG. St. Malo (France).
^ abVan Der Pluijm, B.; Marshak, S. (2004). Earth Structure. W. W. Norton and Company. p. 579.
^ abcBayona, Germán; Montes, Camilo; Cardona, Agustín; Jaramillo, Carlos; Ojeda, Germán; Valencia, Victor; Ayala-Calvo, Carolina (August 2011). "Intraplate subsidence and basin filling adjacent to an oceanic arc-continent collision: a case from the southern Caribbean-South America plate margin". Basin Research. 23 (4): 403–422. Bibcode:2011BasR...23..403B. doi:10.1111/j.1365-2117.2010.00495.x. S2CID128945405.
^ abMiller, J.B. (1962). "Tectonic Trends in Sierra de Perija and Adjacent Parts of Venezuela and Colombia". Bulletin of the American Association of Petroleum Geologists. 46 (46): 1565–1595. doi:10.1306/BC7438D3-16BE-11D7-8645000102C1865D.
^Pindell, J.L.; Higgs, R.; Dewey, J. (1998). "Cenozoic Palinspastic reconstruction, Paleogeographic evolution and hydrocarbon setting of the Northern Margin of South America". Society of Economic Paleontologists and Mineralogists (Society for Sedimentary Geology) (58): 45–84.
^Duerto, Leonardo; Escalona, Alejandro; Mann, Paul (2006). "Deep structure of the Mérida Andes and Sierra de Perijá mountain fronts, Maracaibo Basin, Venezuela". AAPG Bulletin. 90 (4): 505–528. doi:10.1306/10080505033.