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Gulf of Fonseca

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(A) Map of Gulf of Fonseca region with Global Positioning System (GPS) velocities relative to Caribbean plate, shallow-depth earthquake focal mechanisms from the Global Centroid Moment Tensor Catalog and DeMets (2001), and 1984–2010 epicenters for earthquakes shallower than 20 km from the national seismic network of El Salvador (SNET; blue circles). CA—Caribbean. (B) Schematic diagram of Fonseca pull-apart zone (stippled red) and motions of GPS stations relative to the combined Salvadoran and Nicaraguan forearc sliver.
Published: 01 February 2011
Figure 5. (A) Map of Gulf of Fonseca region with Global Positioning System (GPS) velocities relative to Caribbean plate, shallow-depth earthquake focal mechanisms from the Global Centroid Moment Tensor Catalog and DeMets (2001) , and 1984–2010 epicenters for earthquakes shallower than 20 km from
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(A) Gulf of Fonseca showing focal mechanisms from the Harvard Centroid Moment Tensor (CMT) catalog, Shuttle Radar Topography Mission imagery, and bathymetry digitized from the Defense Mapping Agency Hydrographic Topographic Center (1996, scale 1:5000). Subsurface geology was integrated using two multi-channel seismic-reflection lines collected during the EW0412 NicStrat cruise by McIntosh and Fulthorpe (2005). (B) Structural interpretation based on Case and Holcombe (1980), SRTM and Landsat images, and subsurface faults mapped on reflection lines NS102 and NS100 (Figs. 11 and 12). F1 represents a large restraining bend as the forearc sliver boundary curves from Cosiguina volcano (CGV) to the Marabios Range, beginning with San Cristobal volcano (SCV). F2 and F3 are two large faults with significant vertical offsets on late Quaternary deposits of the Cosiguina volcano; both faults project into the Gulf of Fonseca near Meanguero Island (MI), Conchaquito volcano (CNV), and Chochagua volcano (CH). Both faults align with linear highs on bathymetric maps and subsurface faults seen on seismic-reflection lines. F4–F7 are lineaments in the Gulf of Fonseca that we interpret as either faults or fluvial channels incised during lowstands of sea level. The inset map shows a tectonic interpretation for the Gulf of Fonseca area where the proposed forearc sliver boundary changes its strike between faults of the Median Trough in El Salvador and faults of the Nicaraguan depression in northern Nicaragua. ESFZ—El Salvador fault zone, SMV—San Miguel volcano.
Published: 01 November 2009
Figure 9. (A) Gulf of Fonseca showing focal mechanisms from the Harvard Centroid Moment Tensor (CMT) catalog, Shuttle Radar Topography Mission imagery, and bathymetry digitized from the Defense Mapping Agency Hydrographic Topographic Center (1996, scale 1:5000). Subsurface geology was integrated
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Oblique view of the Gulf of Fonseca displaying Shuttle Radar Topography Mission imagery and multichannel seismic-reflection profiles. Seismic-reflection lines in the offshore Sandino basin exhibit onlapping strata indicating an uplift event of pre-Miocene age (Stephens et al., 2007). Locally uplifted onland strata southwest of Cosiguina volcano are indicative of restraining bend deformation along a curving strike-slip segment as shown schematically on the inset in Figure 9B. Several fault lineaments (F2 and F3) trend from the inferred restraining bend area into Cosiguina volcano; these faults produce scarps with significant vertical throws that affect drainages on the flanks of the volcanic edifice. The fault lineaments project into the Gulf of Fonseca and correlate with several linear bathymetric highs along with faults and intrusive features seen on seismic profiles.
Published: 01 November 2009
Figure 10. Oblique view of the Gulf of Fonseca displaying Shuttle Radar Topography Mission imagery and multichannel seismic-reflection profiles. Seismic-reflection lines in the offshore Sandino basin exhibit onlapping strata indicating an uplift event of pre-Miocene age ( Stephens et al., 2007
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(A) The Gulf of Fonseca segment exhibits a half-graben structure with northeastward-dipping normal faults bounding the Nicaraguan depression. There is no offshore folding trenchward of the Central America volcanic front along this segment. Offshore seismic data and wells interpreted from Ranero et al. (2000) and Stephens et al. (2007) and volcanic dating (Ehrenborg, 1996; Balzer, 1999; Plank et al., 2002) indicate an uplift event occurred prior to the Oligocene–Miocene; however, the least amount of erosion and youngest rocks exposed suggest it is in juvenile stage of footwall uplift. VE—vertical exaggeration. (B) The Lake Managua segment exhibits a half-graben structure bound to the southwest by northeasterly dipping normal faults. The Mateare fault bounds the Nicaragua depression as a deeply rooted, steeply dipping normal fault; the antithetic Momotombito normal fault to the northeast is inferred to dip to the southwest. These faults may represent weak zones of the Central America volcanic front that have been preferentially reactivated during the current transtensional strike-slip phase of deformation (Weinberg, 1992). MFZ—Morrito fault zone. (C) The Lake Nicaragua segment shows localized folding and thrust faulting in the offshore region and two main normal faults bounding the Nicaraguan depression. The Rivas anticline underlies much of the narrow Nicaraguan Isthmus area and may represent a normal footwall block bounding the southwestern edge of the highly asymmetrical Nicaraguan depression. The San Ramon fault zone (SRFZ) is interpreted as a synthetic normal fault to the main bounding normal fault of the depression (Lake Nicaragua fault zone [LNFZ]) that produces the overall basin asymmetry. (D) Core data modified from Ranero et al. (2000) were used to construct cross-sections B and C. (E) Oblique view of the Cocos-Caribbean subduction zone showing locations of the cross sections and wells.
Published: 01 November 2009
Figure 23. (A) The Gulf of Fonseca segment exhibits a half-graben structure with northeastward-dipping normal faults bounding the Nicaraguan depression. There is no offshore folding trenchward of the Central America volcanic front along this segment. Offshore seismic data and wells interpreted
Journal Article
Journal: Lithosphere
Publisher: GSW
Published: 01 February 2011
Lithosphere (2011) 3 (1): 3–21.
...Figure 5. (A) Map of Gulf of Fonseca region with Global Positioning System (GPS) velocities relative to Caribbean plate, shallow-depth earthquake focal mechanisms from the Global Centroid Moment Tensor Catalog and DeMets (2001) , and 1984–2010 epicenters for earthquakes shallower than 20 km from...
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First thumbnail for: Forearc motion and deformation between El Salvador...
Second thumbnail for: Forearc motion and deformation between El Salvador...
Third thumbnail for: Forearc motion and deformation between El Salvador...
Journal Article
Journal: GSA Bulletin
Published: 01 November 2009
GSA Bulletin (2009) 121 (11-12): 1491–1521.
...Figure 9. (A) Gulf of Fonseca showing focal mechanisms from the Harvard Centroid Moment Tensor (CMT) catalog, Shuttle Radar Topography Mission imagery, and bathymetry digitized from the Defense Mapping Agency Hydrographic Topographic Center (1996, scale 1:5000). Subsurface geology was integrated...
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First thumbnail for: Cenozoic tectonics of the Nicaraguan depression, N...
Second thumbnail for: Cenozoic tectonics of the Nicaraguan depression, N...
Third thumbnail for: Cenozoic tectonics of the Nicaraguan depression, N...
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(A) Uninterpreted multichannel seismic-reflection line NS102 extending from the offshore Sandino forearc basin across the Central America volcanic front to the Nicaraguan depression in the Gulf of Fonseca. TWT—two-way traveltime. (B) Interpreted line NS102. Offshore strata can be dated using ties from wells drilled in offshore Sandino basin (Ranero et al., 2000). Within the Nicaraguan depression, there are no age constraints from wells. Onlap and faulting make it difficult to correlate between the Sandino forearc basin and the Nicaraguan depression in the Gulf of Fonseca, thus limiting the age constraints for the timing of Nicaraguan depression formation. The feature labeled F2 is interpreted as a local area of inverted strata related to recent transpressional faulting. This zone of faulting correlates with aligned bathymetric highs in the Gulf of Fonseca and onland faults affecting drainages on the flanks of Cosiguina stratovolcano.
Published: 01 November 2009
Figure 11. (A) Uninterpreted multichannel seismic-reflection line NS102 extending from the offshore Sandino forearc basin across the Central America volcanic front to the Nicaraguan depression in the Gulf of Fonseca. TWT—two-way traveltime. (B) Interpreted line NS102. Offshore strata can be dated
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 September 1957
AAPG Bulletin (1957) 41 (9): 2037–2053.
...Orville L. Bandy; Robert E. Arnal ABSTRACT A survey was made of the foraminiferal distribution in the sediments off the west coast of Central America, between depths of 6 and 6,270 feet. Thirty-six samples were examined from areas off Acapulco, off the Gulf of Fonseca, and from the Gulf of Panama...
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First thumbnail for: Distribution of Recent Foraminifera Off West Coast...
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Published: 01 January 2006
DOI: 10.1130/2006.2412(09)
... that chiefly comprise gray andesitic scoria. In northern and southeastern sectors of the volcano, these flowage deposits form broad fans and valley fills that locally reach the Gulf of Fonseca. An arcuate ridge 2 km west of the caldera rim and a low ridge east of the caldera deflected pyroclastic flows...
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Schematic diagrams discussed in text for possible deformation across the Gulf of Fonseca in response to the offset of the volcanic arc and volcanic arc faults. Arrows indicate sense of relative motion across the faults, and triangles show volcano locations.
Published: 01 February 2011
Figure 3. Schematic diagrams discussed in text for possible deformation across the Gulf of Fonseca in response to the offset of the volcanic arc and volcanic arc faults. Arrows indicate sense of relative motion across the faults, and triangles show volcano locations.
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Geosat marine gravity map showing the change in strike of the Middle America Trench, the outer shelf rise, Sandino forearc basin, major Quaternary volcanoes, and trends of Lakes Managua, Nicaragua, and Gulf of Fonseca, which occupy the Nicaraguan depression. Major stratovolcanoes along the Central America volcanic front are marked by yellow triangles. The trend of the Central America volcanic front shows discrete, right-lateral offsets that range in length from 15 to 25 km. Slab contours from Syracuse and Abers (2006).
Published: 01 November 2009
Figure 3. Geosat marine gravity map showing the change in strike of the Middle America Trench, the outer shelf rise, Sandino forearc basin, major Quaternary volcanoes, and trends of Lakes Managua, Nicaragua, and Gulf of Fonseca, which occupy the Nicaraguan depression. Major stratovolcanoes along
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Observed power in the 0.75–3 s range as a function of distance plotted against a simple surface‐wave power decay model. (a) Gray dots show mean 0.75–3 s power from each TA contiguous United States (L48) station’s median power curve. Decay curves are shown as colored lines corresponding to quality factor (Q) values used in the model. Black dashed lines show distance extent plotted in panel (b). (b) Same as panel (a), but includes median 0.75–3 s power from each CU station median power curve (black dots), and zoomed in to show detail. CU stations are labeled. CU distance to beach was measured to nearest open‐ocean beach rather than strictly nearest coastline point. We did this to avoid sheltered bays and inlets where beach energy is subdued such as the Gulf of Fonseca near TGUH and Guantanamo Bay near GTBY.
Published: 08 March 2024
was measured to nearest open‐ocean beach rather than strictly nearest coastline point. We did this to avoid sheltered bays and inlets where beach energy is subdued such as the Gulf of Fonseca near TGUH and Guantanamo Bay near GTBY.
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Regional tectonic map of Central America emphasizing key structures described in this paper. The El Salvador fault zone (ESFZ) is characterized by a broad right-lateral shear zone accommodating transtensional motion that results in multiple pull-apart basins. A major transition zone occurs in the Gulf of Fonseca, where strike-slip fault zones along the Central American forearc sliver change strike from dominantly east-west strikes in El Salvador to northwesterly strikes in Nicaragua. A proposed restraining bend connects faults mapped in the Gulf of Fonseca with fault scarps deforming Cosiguina volcano and faults of the Central America volcanic front north of Lake Managua. Diffuse and poorly exposed faults parallel to the Central America volcanic front in northern Nicaraguan segment are inferred to represent a young fault boundary in which right-lateral shear is accommodated over a broad zone. This model proposes a young en echelon pattern of strike-slip and secondary faults based on secondary extensional features and fissure eruptions along the Marabios segment of the Central America volcanic front. Lake Managua and the Managua graben are interpreted to occur at a major releasing bend in the trend of the Nicaraguan depression and are marked by the curving surface trace of the Mateare fault interpreted from aeromagnetic data. Subsequent right-lateral strike-slip motion related to translation of the Central America forearc sliver may occur along these reactivated normal faults. The Lake Nicaragua segment of the Central America volcanic front is bounded by a normal fault (LNFZ—Lake Nicaragua fault zone) offsetting the Rivas anticline, the southeastward continuation of this normal fault into Costa Rica (CNFZ—Costa Rica fault zone), and a synthetic normal fault (SRFZ—San Ramon fault zone) that we discovered in our survey of Lake Nicaragua. Transverse faults (MFZ—Morrito fault zone, JMFZ—Jesus Maria fault zone) strike approximately east-west across the Central America volcanic front. North-south–trending rift zones are abundant in El Salvador but less common in Nicaragua and may also be controlled by regional east-west extension affecting the northwestern corner of the Caribbean plate.
Published: 01 November 2009
occurs in the Gulf of Fonseca, where strike-slip fault zones along the Central American forearc sliver change strike from dominantly east-west strikes in El Salvador to northwesterly strikes in Nicaragua. A proposed restraining bend connects faults mapped in the Gulf of Fonseca with fault scarps
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(A) Uninterpreted multichannel seismic-reflection line NS100, 5 km from NS102 at the northeast end of the lines. In the eastern part of NS100, it is difficult to identify reflections below ~500 ms because of the presence of a strong reflector, possibly a lava flow. The eastern part of the depression shows deeper reflectors at 2000–3000 ms two-way traveltime (TWT). The most laterally continuous reflector occurs at ~1500 ms TWT, although a faint reflector may be imaged around 2250 ms TWT. (B) Interpreted line NS100. Synrift deposits of the Nicaraguan depression in the Gulf of Fonseca (green) show a maximum thickness toward the east and thin to the west, terminating near the eastern boundary of the Nicaraguan depression. F2 can be correlated with features on NS102, bathymetric highs, and faults on the flank of Cosiguina stratovolcano.
Published: 01 November 2009
of the depression shows deeper reflectors at 2000–3000 ms two-way traveltime (TWT). The most laterally continuous reflector occurs at ~1500 ms TWT, although a faint reflector may be imaged around 2250 ms TWT. (B) Interpreted line NS100. Synrift deposits of the Nicaraguan depression in the Gulf of Fonseca (green
Journal Article
Published: 07 January 2020
Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (2020) 110 (1): 1–17.
...Joao F. B. D. Fonseca ABSTRACT The 1755 Lisbon earthquake is still poorly understood due to its offshore location and complex macroseismic intensity pattern. Gutenberg and Richter (1949) tentatively assigned a magnitude between 8¾ and 9 judging from an estimated perceptibility radius of 2500 km...
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First thumbnail for: A Reassessment of the Magnitude of the 1755 Lisbon...
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Journal Article
Journal: Geology
Published: 01 August 2002
Geology (2002) 30 (8): 751–754.
... of the Central American volcanic arc along northeast-trending transverse structures located at right steps in the volcanic arc and between volcanic complexes. In Nicaragua, right steps in the arc are located at the Gulf of Fonseca, Managua, and southeastern Lago de Nicaragua ( Carr and Stoiber, 1977 ; Fig. 4...
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First thumbnail for: Bookshelf faulting in Nicaragua
Second thumbnail for: Bookshelf faulting in Nicaragua
Third thumbnail for: Bookshelf faulting in Nicaragua
Journal Article
Published: 03 June 2014
Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (2014) 104 (3): 1212–1229.
... Arvidsson; Joao F. B. D. Fonseca Abstract In probabilistic seismic‐hazard analysis ( PSHA ), seismic source zone ( SSZ ) models are widely used to account for the contribution to the hazard from earthquakes not directly correlated with geological structures. Notwithstanding the impact of SSZ models in PSHA...
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First thumbnail for: Incorporating Descriptive Metadata into Seismic So...
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(Upper panel) Tectonic and topographic map of study area showing major plate boundaries (red lines), focal mechanisms of shallow-depth earthquakes within the Caribbean plate, and locations of Global Positioning System (GPS) stations used in this study (red circles). Inset in lower left corner indicates location of study area (black square) and names of tectonic plates. Topography is from 30 m Space Shuttle Topographic Radar Mission (SRTM) data. Red arrows and ellipses show Cocos plate velocities relative to Caribbean plate and 1σ uncertainties (DeMets, 2001). Red dashed lines indicate directions perpendicular to the trench. Black triangles represent active volcanoes. Focal mechanisms are from the Global Centroid Moment Tensor (CMT) catalog and sources given by DeMets (2001). GF—Gulf of Fonseca; ND—Nicaraguan Depression; LM—Lake Managua; LN—Lake Nicaragua. (Lower panel) Idealized forearc deformation along a concave-shaped subduction zone, as follows: (A) Convergence obliquity and partitioning of oblique convergence decrease from southeast to northwest and induce local, margin-parallel shortening (red arrows) with variable strike-slip component in the forearc. (B) Weak or zero coupling across a subduction interface gives rise to no slip partitioning and hence no upper-plate deformation. (C) Undeformed forearc translates along the trench if coupling is weak and forearc motion is driven by push or pull beneath or at the trailing or leading edge of the forearc. (D) Same as C, but with localized extension (red arrows) at an offset of the overlying forearc fault. Black arrows indicate relative plate motion.
Published: 01 February 2011
indicate directions perpendicular to the trench. Black triangles represent active volcanoes. Focal mechanisms are from the Global Centroid Moment Tensor (CMT) catalog and sources given by DeMets (2001) . GF—Gulf of Fonseca; ND—Nicaraguan Depression; LM—Lake Managua; LN—Lake Nicaragua. (Lower panel
Journal Article
Journal: Geology
Published: 01 January 2012
Geology (2012) 40 (1): 15–18.
... of California permits a seasonal-scale reconstruction of water column flux events and hence interannual paleoclimate variability. The annual flux cycle resembles that of the modern Gulf of California with diatoms characteristic of spring upwelling blooms followed by silt and clay, and is consistent...
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First thumbnail for: El Niño–Southern Oscillation variability from the ...
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Journal Article
Published: 06 April 2016
Seismological Research Letters (2016) 87 (3): 773–782.
... by the Seismological Society of America Mainland Portugal, on the southwesternmost tip of the European continent, has been repeatedly affected by severely damaging earthquakes throughout its history (e.g., Oliveira, 1986 ; Martins and Mendes‐Víctor, 1990 ; Moreira, 1991 ; Vilanova and Fonseca, 2007...
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First thumbnail for: Educating for Earthquake Science and Risk in a Tec...
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