Silver, Eli et al. (2000): Fluid flow paths in the Middle America Trench and Costa Rica margin

Leg/Site/Hole:
ODP 170
ODP 170 1039
ODP 170 1040
ODP 170 1043
Identifier:
2000-056041
georefid

10.1130/0091-7613(2000)028<0679:FFPITM>2.3.CO;2
doi

Creator:
Silver, Eli
University of California at Santa Cruz, Earth Sciences Department, Santa Cruz, CA, United States
author

Kastner, Miriam
Scripps Institution of Oceanography, United States
author

Fisher, Andrew
Washington University, St. Louis, MO, United States
author

Morris, Julie
University of Texas at Austin, United States
author

McIntosh, Kirk
author

Saffer, Demian
author

Identification:
Fluid flow paths in the Middle America Trench and Costa Rica margin
2000
Geology (Boulder)
Geological Society of America (GSA), Boulder, CO, United States
28
8
679-682
The hydrology of the subducting plate and its dewatering behavior through the shallow subduction zone is linked to the structure and deformation of the forearc prism, the nature of the seismogenic zone, the composition of seawater for selected elements, and the composition of the residual slab subducted to depths of magma generation at the volcanic arc. Two locally independent systems of fluid flow govern the transport of heat and chemistry through the Costa Rica subduction complex, a dominantly nonaccretionary subduction zone. One fluid system is the margin wedge, decollement, and underthrust sediment section. Fluid sources include local sediment compaction and mineral dehydration at depth. A second flow system occurs in basement, beneath the sedimentary sequence on the incoming plate. This region is characterized by extremely low conductive heat flow, and the sediment overlying basement has pore-water geochemistry similar to that of seawater. Flow nearly parallel to the trench could be directed by permeability associated with faults and driven by a combination of differential heating and earthquake strain cycling.
English
Serial
Coverage:Geographic coordinates:
North:10.0000
West:-86.3000East: -85.0000
South:8.3000

Solid-earth geophysics; accretionary wedges; Central America; compaction; connate waters; continental margin; Costa Rica; decollement; dehydration; East Pacific; faults; fluid dynamics; geochemistry; geophysical profiles; geophysical surveys; heat flow; hydrochemistry; Leg 170; marine sediments; Middle America Trench; North Pacific; Northeast Pacific; Ocean Drilling Program; ocean floors; ODP Site 1039; ODP Site 1040; ODP Site 1043; Pacific Ocean; permeability; plate convergence; pore water; sediments; seismic profiles; subduction zones; surveys; trenches; underthrust faults;

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