EarthRef.org Reference Database (ERR)
Development and Maintenance by the EarthRef.org Database Team

Detailed Reference Information
Bird et al. 1998
Bird, R.T., Naar, D.F., Larson, R.L., Searle, R.C. and Scotese, C.R. (1998). Plate tectonic reconstructions of the Juan Fernandez microplate: Transformation from internal shear to rigid rotation. Journal of Geophysical Research 103: doi: 10.1029/97JB02133. issn: 0148-0227.

Side-scan sonar, swath bathymetry and magnetic anomaly data define a detailed, three-phase history of the Juan Fernandez microplate. The ~6 m.y. history is presented in a series of discrete time steps to document the growth and reorganization of propagating spreading centers and structural features, and microplate kinematic evolution. Prior to the microplate, the East Pacific Rise at the Pacific-Antarctic-Nazca triple junction was offset by a long transform fault zone, likely the fastest slipping transform on Earth at anomaly 3A time. The microplate originated from an intratransform setting between anomaly 3A (5.95 Ma) and anomaly 3 (5.24 Ma) time. Its early development resembled a large propagating rift system, and microplate core structures suggest the entire offset zone may have experienced deformation. Fast propagation of the East Ridge dominated microplate growth until ~2.6--1.9 Ma when seafloor spreading became the dominant growth process. The microplate rotation rate increased threefold (from 9 to 29¿ m.y.-1 average) from phase 1 (4.2--2.6 Ma) to phase 2 (2.6--1.1 Ma) of the microplate's history, then reduced fourfold (29 to 7¿ m.y.-1 average; phase 3, 1.1 Ma to Present). Phases 2 and 3 of the microplate's rotational history support the edge-driven model for microplate kinematics of Schouten and others to a good approximation. The Pacific-Nazca shear couple drove microplate rotation during phase 2, but development of the southeastern boundary enabled a transfer to the Nazca-Antarctic plate pair (phase 3). West Ridge propagation and reorganization of the southwestern boundary may have decoupled the Pacific plate from the microplate, thus facilitating the shear couple transfer. The recent continued deceleration in microplate rotation rate and westward migration of the Pacific-Antarctic ridge axis relative to the microplate may indicate that the process of microplate death has begun. We speculate that the Juan Fernandez microplate will accrete to the Antarctic plate, perhaps within the next million years, like the extinct Friday microplate has done, thereby accomplishing another northward migration of the Pacific-Antarctic-Nazca triple junction. Our reconstructions illustrate that the Easter and Juan Fernandez microplates are more similar than previously thought in terms of their origin, growth, rift propagation, ridge segmentation and overall tectonic evolution. ¿ 1998 American Geophysical Union

BACKGROUND DATA FILES

Abstract

Keywords
Marine Geology and Geophysics, Plate tectonics, Marine Geology and Geophysics, Midocean ridge processes, Tectonophysics, Plate motions—present and recent, Tectonophysics, Plate boundary—general
Journal
Journal of Geophysical Research
http://www.agu.org/journals/jb/
Publisher
American Geophysical Union
2000 Florida Avenue N.W.
Washington, D.C. 20009-1277
USA
1-202-462-6900
1-202-328-0566
service@agu.org
Click to clear formClick to return to previous pageClick to submit