2014
DOI: 10.1002/2013tc003425
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Rock uplift and exhumation of continental margins by the collision, accretion, and subduction of buoyant and topographically prominent oceanic crust

Abstract: Understanding the causes of rock and surface uplift is important because they control the location of mountain building, depocenters, and drainage characteristics and can influence climate. Here we combine previous thermochronological data with field observations to determine the amount of exhumation, rock, and surface uplift that occurs in the upper plate of Central and South American subduction zones during the collision, accretion, and subduction of oceanic plateaus and aseismic ridges. The collision of buo… Show more

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Cited by 50 publications
(46 citation statements)
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References 162 publications
(268 reference statements)
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“…Among them are the Osa und Burica Peninsulas, which are located about 20–30 km away from the Central American Trench, a thrust belt called Fila Costeña and—separated from the Fila Costeña by a valley—the Talamanca Range, which shows the largest width and highest peaks inboard of the Cocos Ridge (Figure a). The Burica Peninsula coincides with the prolongation of the southeastern edge of the Cocos Ridge as well as with the northern end of the Panama Fracture Zone [e.g., Gardner et al ., ; Morell et al ., ; Spikings and Simpson , ]. A wealth of data exists on the uplift history of the peninsulas and the exhumation history of the Talamanca Range, which many authors attribute at least partly to the subduction of the Cocos Ridge [e.g., Corrigan et al ., ; Sitchler et al ., ; Morell et al ., ; Gardner et al ., ], although the onset of ridge subduction is still under debate.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Among them are the Osa und Burica Peninsulas, which are located about 20–30 km away from the Central American Trench, a thrust belt called Fila Costeña and—separated from the Fila Costeña by a valley—the Talamanca Range, which shows the largest width and highest peaks inboard of the Cocos Ridge (Figure a). The Burica Peninsula coincides with the prolongation of the southeastern edge of the Cocos Ridge as well as with the northern end of the Panama Fracture Zone [e.g., Gardner et al ., ; Morell et al ., ; Spikings and Simpson , ]. A wealth of data exists on the uplift history of the peninsulas and the exhumation history of the Talamanca Range, which many authors attribute at least partly to the subduction of the Cocos Ridge [e.g., Corrigan et al ., ; Sitchler et al ., ; Morell et al ., ; Gardner et al ., ], although the onset of ridge subduction is still under debate.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Also not considered are erosion and sedimentation of the forearc wedge, with the consequence that our models cannot provide constraints, for example, on rates of rock exhumation above subducting ridges [cf. Wipf et al ., ; Spikings and Simpson , ].…”
Section: Model Setupmentioning
confidence: 98%
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“…The impingement of prominent bathymetric features (seamounts, ridges, plateaus) is common in modern convergent margins ( Figure 1) and may cause flattening of the slab dip angle, tectonic erosion/accretion, gaps in arc volcanism and kilometric uplift in the overriding plate (Chuang, Bostock, Wech, & Plourde, 2017;Cloos, 1993;McCann & Habermann, 1989;McGeary, Nur, & Benavraham, 1985;Rosenbaum & Mo, 2011;Spikings & Simpson, 2014). Although the effects of colliding bathymetric relief may depend on the amount of sediment, strength of the overriding plate, convergence velocity and size/orientation of the feature, it appears that the response of forearc areas is similar for oceanic and continental margins (Draut & Clift, 2013;Geist, Fisher, & Scholl, 1993;Trehu, Blakely, & Williams, 2012).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%