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The likely Quaternary active El Arrayán fault, Santiago, Chile
Indexado
WoS WOS:000734938800001
Scopus SCOPUS_ID:85124616979
SciELO S0718-71062021000300529
DOI 10.5027/ANDGEOV48N3-3256
Año 2021
Tipo artículo de investigación

Citas Totales

Autores Afiliación Chile

Instituciones Chile

% Participación
Internacional

Autores
Afiliación Extranjera

Instituciones
Extranjeras


Abstract



Understanding the location and nature of Quaternary active crustal faults is critical to the reduction of both fault rupture and strong ground motions hazards in built environments. Recent work along the San Ramon Fault (SRF) demonstrates that crustal seismic sources are important hazards within the Santiago Metropolitan region of Chile. In this paper, we present the evidence of a second likely Quaternary active fault (the El Arrayan Fault, EAF) that runs through the northeastern part of Santiago, in the Lo Barnechea area. The EAF is a strike-slip fault zone at least 13 km-long, has a steep dip (mean dip 77 degrees NNE), and a WNW-ESE general trend (similar to 110 degrees) that cuts across folded rocks of the Abanico Formation and Quaternary deposits. Sequences of meter-wide fault rocks in El Arrayan area are coincident with the tectonic geomorphology of the EAF, with fault scarps, deflected streams, saddles, "island hills", sag ponds and linear valleys in the La Dehesa area and coincident with fault strike from the bedrock exposures. Although direct dating is not yet available, fault exposures tied to fault-related tectonic and geomorphic features that crosscut Late-Quaternary morphologies and deposits (including hillslopes, ridges, landslides and alluvial fans), provides strong evidence that the EAF is a Quaternary active and seismogenic crustal fault. Sinistral slickensides and left-lateral deflected streams indicates a left-lateral kinematics (with slight up to the north reverse motion) for the EAF. Due to the location, geometry, kinematics and likely Quaternary activity of the EAF, this structure is interpreted as an arc-oblique transfer zone of the West Andean Thrust (WATS). If the EAF has stick-slip behaviour, it is potentially an important source of fault rupture and strong ground motions and could be responsible for earthquakes up to Mw 6.4 based on earthquake scaling laws and microseismicity observations in and around Santiago. The lack of fault zone avoidance criteria (i.e., do not build in and around active faults) in Chilean law, requires immediate enhanced fault mapping, legislation and the implementation of active fault rupture avoidance areas to reduce the risk associated with active crustal structures in the built environment.

Revista



Revista ISSN
Andean Geology 0718-7106

Métricas Externas



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Disciplinas de Investigación



WOS
Geology
Geosciences, Multidisciplinary
Scopus
Geology
Geochemistry And Petrology
Stratigraphy
Paleontology
SciELO
Exact And Earth Sciences

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Publicaciones WoS (Ediciones: ISSHP, ISTP, AHCI, SSCI, SCI), Scopus, SciELO Chile.

Colaboración Institucional



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Autores - Afiliación



Ord. Autor Género Institución - País
Araya, Jose Hombre Universidad de Chile - Chile
De Pascale, Gregory P. Hombre Universidad de Chile - Chile
Mardel, Rodrigo Hombre Universidad de Chile - Chile
SEPULVEDA-VALENZUELA, SERGIO ANDRES Hombre Universidad de Chile - Chile
Univ O Higgins - Chile
Simon Fraser Univ - Canadá
Universidad de O’Higgins - Chile
Simon Fraser University, 8888 University Drive - Canadá

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Financiamiento



Fuente
NERC-Newton
Fondo Nacional de Desarrollo Científico y Tecnológico
Comisión Nacional de Investigación Científica y Tecnológica
NERC-Newton fund
ANID
ANID/CONICYT
Fondecyt Grant by ANID/CONICYT

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Agradecimientos



Agradecimiento
This study was funded by NERC-Newton Fund grant NE/N000315/1. Postgraduate students M. Persico, F. Sandoval, S. Perroud, M. Hernandez, S. Pairoa of the neotectonic group of U. Chile provided useful comments, observations, and assistance in the field. De Pascale is also supported by a Fondecyt Grant #11160038 by ANID/CONICYT to work on active faults. Thanks to the other Newton Fund researchers for valuable discussions and insights in the field regarding this topic including D. Petley, M. Froude, W. Murphy, and M. Brain. Portions of this work were part of the MSc work by Araya, and the Honour Thesis by Mardel in the Department of Geology at U. Chile. Thanks for feedback from G. Easton, L. Pinto, and S. Rebolledo on aspects of the neotectonics of Santiago, WATS, and the SRF. Tremendous thanks to J. Skarmeta for thoughtful reviews and suggestions that improved our paper and thanks to the Editor of Andean Geology (W. Vivallo) for reviewing this work and for expert feedback as well. This is the Universidad de Chile's Neotectonic group contribution #47.
This study was funded by NERC-Newton Fund grant NE/N000315/1. Postgraduate students M. Pérsico, F. Sandoval, S. Perroud, M. Hernández, S. Pairoa of the neotectonic group of U. Chile provided useful comments, observations, and assistance in the field. De Pascale is also supported by a Fondecyt Grant #11160038 by ANID/CONICYT to work on active faults. Thanks to the other Newton Fund researchers for valuable discussions and insights in the field regarding this topic including D. Petley, M. Froude, W. Murphy, and M. Brain. Portions of this work were part of the MSc work by Araya, and the Honour Thesis by Mardel in the Department of Geology at U. Chile. Thanks for feedback from G. Easton, L. Pinto, and S. Rebolledo on aspects of the neotectonics of Santiago, WATS, and the SRF. Tremendous thanks to J. Skarmeta for thoughtful reviews and suggestions that improved our paper and thanks to the Editor of Andean Geology (W. Vivallo) for reviewing this work and for expert feedback as well. This is the Universidad de Chile’s Neotectonic group contribution #47.

Muestra la fuente de financiamiento declarada en la publicación.