1993
DOI: 10.1029/93tc00673
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Structure and deformation history of the northern range of Trinidad and adjacent areas

Abstract: Conflicting models have been proposed for both the evolution of northern South America and the neotectonics of the south Caribbean plate boundary zone. The Trinidadian portion of the margin is particularly controversial, but surprisingly it has been little studied. We present a structural analysis of Trinidad's Northern Range, pertinent updates of the island's stratigraphy and sedimentology, and new zircon fission track age determinations, and use them to constrain Trinidad's geologic history, and to better un… Show more

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Cited by 58 publications
(58 citation statements)
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“…Concerning the azimuth of motion, an essentially east -west azimuth for the southeast Caribbean was employed by Robertson & Burke (1989) in the north Trinidad offshore. Algar & Pindell (1993) confirmed that Trinidad had a younger structural style which accords with east-west transcurrence (0858), but that this was superposed onto an older style (pre-10 Ma) that was more compressive. The 0858 azimuth in the southeast Caribbean was Fig.…”
Section: Eocene -Middle Miocene Transcurrence and Oblique Collision Asupporting
confidence: 60%
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“…Concerning the azimuth of motion, an essentially east -west azimuth for the southeast Caribbean was employed by Robertson & Burke (1989) in the north Trinidad offshore. Algar & Pindell (1993) confirmed that Trinidad had a younger structural style which accords with east-west transcurrence (0858), but that this was superposed onto an older style (pre-10 Ma) that was more compressive. The 0858 azimuth in the southeast Caribbean was Fig.…”
Section: Eocene -Middle Miocene Transcurrence and Oblique Collision Asupporting
confidence: 60%
“…2), where most Caribbean-South American displacement has occurred (Pindell et al 1988). The cause of the Neo-Caribbean Phase appears to have been, in the eastern Caribbean at least, a late Middle Miocene change of about 158 in the Caribbean Plate's azimuth of motion relative to the American plates, from 0858 to 0708 for North America and from 1008 to 0858 for South America (Algar & Pindell 1993;Pindell et al 1998), and possibly to the hot spot reference frame as well (Müller et al 1993;see below). It is difficult to reconcile pre-Late Miocene evolution of the Caribbean margins with the Present azimuth of relative motion.…”
Section: Eocene -Middle Miocene Transcurrence and Oblique Collision Amentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…On December 2 and 3, 2004 events with a magnitude of 5.8 and 5.4 (M w ) occurred in the central north-east of Trinidad, fault plane solutions suggest mainly a normal motion with a component of right-lateral strike slip. The location of these earthquakes and the correspondent focal mechanisms coincide with the Northern Range normal fault dipping southward mapped by Algar and Pindell [27] beneath the Caroni Swamp area.…”
Section: Zone 12: Trinidad Faultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Middle Miocene: Trinidad were generated as a result of this dextral oblique collision between the Caribbean and South American plates (Algar and Pindell, 1993). In the offshore region, the thrust faults and associated folds were later buried by late Miocene sediments associated with the Orinoco Delta system (Pindell et al, 2005).…”
Section: Paleocene To Middle Miocenementioning
confidence: 99%