Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8908648 | Tectonophysics | 2018 | 30 Pages |
Abstract
The S. Jorge Island in the Azores lies on a peculiar setting, the southern shoulder of the Terceira Rift (TR), which raises a series of questions that we address in this study. We first established the main volcanic stratigraphy by recognizing, in the field, the main unconformities/discontinuities and their meaning (major erosion surfaces and faults), then we collected critical samples, and finally dated them by K/Ar to calibrate the stratigraphy and the age of inferred large-scale flank collapses. Based on field, geochronological and marine geophysical data: (1) we found much older rocks in S. Jorge than in previous studies (ca. 1.85â¯Ma), and established a new volcanic stratigraphy (from bottom to top): Old Volcanic Complex (ca. 1.9-1.2â¯Ma), cropping out in the eastern third of the island; Intermediate Volcanic Complex (ca. 0.8-0.2â¯Ma), cropping out in the western two thirds of the island and separated from the underlying complex by a major fault; Young Volcanic Complex (
Keywords
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Earth and Planetary Sciences
Earth-Surface Processes
Authors
F.O. Marques, A. Hildenbrand, C. Hübscher,