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Nicaragua Lake

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Journal Article
Published: 01 June 1966
Journal of Sedimentary Research (1966) 36 (2): 522–540.
...Frederick M. Swain Abstract Studies involving water temperature, water composition, hydrogen ion concentration, oxidation-reduction potentials, oxygen content, fauna and flora were made of Lakes Nicaragua and Managua that lie within a graben in the volcanic region of western Nicaragua. Bottom...
Journal Article
Published: 01 November 1970
Journal of Paleontology (1970) 44 (6): 1134–1135.
Image
Inferred trace of the Costa Rica–Lake Nicaragua fault that offsets the northwestern edge of the Quaternary Central America volcanic front in Costa Rica and projects along the southwestern shore of Lake Nicaragua. This fault system exhibits ~300–800 m of vertical topographic relief in Costa Rica and forms a continuous scarp for ~50–60 km. The Costa Rica fault zone is responsible for southwesterly tilts in Quaternary volcanic deposits in the area south of Lake Nicaragua. Southwestward dips on strata protruding from the coastal plain south of Lake Nicaragua support the presence of the Lake Nicaragua fault zone near the present lake coastline. MFZ—Morrito fault zone, SRFZ—San Ramon fault zone.
Published: 01 November 2009
Figure 18. Inferred trace of the Costa Rica–Lake Nicaragua fault that offsets the northwestern edge of the Quaternary Central America volcanic front in Costa Rica and projects along the southwestern shore of Lake Nicaragua. This fault system exhibits ~300–800 m of vertical topographic relief
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(A) An aeromagnetic data set (contour interval 50 gammas) acquired in 1969 by Superior Oil Associates covering the Pacific coast and the western regions of Lake Managua and Nicaragua. (B) Aeromagnetic interpretation is critical in correlating known offshore faults and folds with the onshore geology and helps constrain the location of the poorly known southwestern boundary fault of the Nicaraguan depression, the Morrito fault zone (MFZ) and the Lake Nicaragua fault zone (LNFZ). Faults and folds are based on the interpretation of aeromagnetic data from the Lake Nicaragua and Managua surveys and previously published geologic maps.
Published: 01 November 2009
Figure 21. (A) An aeromagnetic data set (contour interval 50 gammas) acquired in 1969 by Superior Oil Associates covering the Pacific coast and the western regions of Lake Managua and Nicaragua. (B) Aeromagnetic interpretation is critical in correlating known offshore faults and folds
Journal Article
Journal: GSA Bulletin
Published: 01 November 2009
GSA Bulletin (2009) 121 (11-12): 1491–1521.
...Figure 18. Inferred trace of the Costa Rica–Lake Nicaragua fault that offsets the northwestern edge of the Quaternary Central America volcanic front in Costa Rica and projects along the southwestern shore of Lake Nicaragua. This fault system exhibits ~300–800 m of vertical topographic relief...
FIGURES
First thumbnail for: Cenozoic tectonics of the Nicaraguan depression, <...
Second thumbnail for: Cenozoic tectonics of the Nicaraguan depression, <...
Third thumbnail for: Cenozoic tectonics of the Nicaraguan depression, <...
Published: 01 January 2006
DOI: 10.1130/2006.2412(08)
... fallout, and pyroclastic flows, as well as tsunamis generated by volcanic eruptions within and close to Nicaragua's large lakes. Group 2 includes nonexplosive volcanic activity such as lava flows and the permanent or episodic emission of volcanic gases from open vents. Group 3 comprises chiefly lahars...
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 March 1961
AAPG Bulletin (1961) 45 (3): 411.
... stabilized and adjusted, the Nicaraguan depression was filled in leaving only Lakes Nicaragua and Managua and the San Juan River to mark its former course, and the Isthmus had assumed the shape we know today. This relatively simple tectonic history provokes questions concerning forces and crustal behavior...
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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
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
Image
(A) 3.5 kHz subbottom profiler line NLP61 crossing San Ramon fault zone (FZ) in Lake Nicaragua. This area forms the deepest part of the lake, ~40 m in depth near the southern coast of Maderas volcano. The fault forms a linear trend approximately N45°W and controls an asymmetrical depocenter to the southwest. (B) This line near the western shore of the lake exhibits rock subcrops that are most likely part of the adjacent, onshore Rivas Formation. Based on the profile and outcrops seen near the shoreline during the survey, the bedding planes of the Rivas Formation dip 12°–15° to the west-southwest. (C) The second major fault zone in Lake Nicaragua, the Jesus Maria fault zone, trends approximately east-west and is associated with an anomalously uplifted, elongate ridge on the lake floor. Both sides of this linear feature appear to be fault bounded, show 3–4 m of vertical offset, and appear to be uplifted near the center of a more broad bathy-metric high between Concepcion volcano and the western shoreline of the lake. VE—vertical exaggeration.
Published: 01 November 2009
Figure 19. (A) 3.5 kHz subbottom profiler line NLP61 crossing San Ramon fault zone (FZ) in Lake Nicaragua. This area forms the deepest part of the lake, ~40 m in depth near the southern coast of Maderas volcano. The fault forms a linear trend approximately N45°W and controls an asymmetrical
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 September 1963
AAPG Bulletin (1963) 47 (9): 1774.
... basin on the west and the Mosquitia embayment on the east. The main trough of the marginal geosyncline shifted south, and 35,000 feet of sediments were deposited in the area of Lake Nicaragua during Upper Cretaceous and Tertiary time. The Ulua basin received 2,000 feet of Upper Cretaceous and Eocene...
Image
(A) The Shuttle Radar Topography Mission topographic image shows Lake Nicaragua bounded to the west by uplifted rocks of the Pacific coast and to the east by the interior Nicaragua Highlands. (B) Map showing geology and structure compiled by Case and Holcombe (1980) and Instituto Nicaraguense de Estudios Territoriales (INETER) with focal mechanisms from the Harvard Centroid Moment Tensor (CMT) catalog. Three main faults zones (Jesus Maria—JMFZ, Morrito—MFZ, San Ramon—SRFZ) were discovered beneath the lake, along with numerous uncorrelat-able small-scale faults. (C) Bottom sediment map is compiled from 35 sediment cores collected during the NicLakes survey (Wulf et al., 2007). Bottom sediment type distribution suggests the majority of the lake bottom consists of a homogeneous, diatomaceous mud as shown in the inset (diatom photos in inset are courtesy of Jennifer Slate, Northeastern Illinois University).
Published: 01 November 2009
Figure 17. (A) The Shuttle Radar Topography Mission topographic image shows Lake Nicaragua bounded to the west by uplifted rocks of the Pacific coast and to the east by the interior Nicaragua Highlands. (B) Map showing geology and structure compiled by Case and Holcombe (1980) and Instituto
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Previous tectonic models for structural deformation of the Nicaraguan depression. (A) McBirney and Williams (1965) first described the depression as a half-graben bound to the southwest by the Mateare normal fault northwest of Managua. (B) Borgia and van Wyk de Vries (2002) proposed that folding occurred along the Lake Nicaragua segment during a convergent phase linked to subduction of the Cocos plate. In this model, the Nicaraguan depression occupies a piggyback basin bound to the west by the Rivas anticline and to the east by the uplifted interior highlands of Nicaragua.
Published: 01 November 2009
that folding occurred along the Lake Nicaragua segment during a convergent phase linked to subduction of the Cocos plate. In this model, the Nicaraguan depression occupies a piggyback basin bound to the west by the Rivas anticline and to the east by the uplifted interior highlands of Nicaragua.
Journal Article
Published: 01 June 2002
Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (2002) 92 (5): 1694–1707.
...Hugh Cowan; Carol Prentice; Daniela Pantosti; Paolo de Martini; Wilfried Strauch; Workshop Participants Abstract Managua, capital of Nicaragua, is built on the shore of Lake Managua, within a densely faulted graben at a major discontinuity in the Central American volcanic chain. Shallow moderate...
FIGURES
First thumbnail for: Late Holocene Earthquakes on the Aeropuerto Fault,...
Second thumbnail for: Late Holocene Earthquakes on the Aeropuerto Fault,...
Third thumbnail for: Late Holocene Earthquakes on the Aeropuerto Fault,...
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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
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
Image
(A) Uninterpreted 3.5 kHz subbottom profiler line NLP55 crossing the Morrito fault zone of Lake Nicaragua. This linear depression trends approximately N75°E, exhibits 12–15 m of vertical offset, is not traceable westward to Maderas volcano, and shallows significantly to the east. VE—vertical exaggeration. (B) Interpreted 3.5 kHz subbottom profiler line NLP55. The southern margin of this fault zone appears to be covered by a clastic wedge that provides evidence for the age of active faulting; reflectors Ra–Re are the only subsurface layers imaged beneath the lake. (C) Several cores and grab samples were also taken across this profile. These cores show gray-blue waxy clay just below the surface of the upthrown block, through the clastic wedge, dated at 11,271–11,403 cal 14C yr B.P. The same clay found in grab sample #5 constrains the age of fault activity and shows an average vertical slip rate of 73 cm per 1000 yr (Wulf et al., 2007). This same clay is found in a grab sample near the center of the Morrito fault zone trough, suggesting 12–15 m of vertical displacement throughout the Holocene. (D) Oblique view of Lake Nicaragua showing cross-section location. MFZ—Morrito fault zone, SRFZ—San Ramon fault zone.
Published: 01 November 2009
Figure 20. (A) Uninterpreted 3.5 kHz subbottom profiler line NLP55 crossing the Morrito fault zone of Lake Nicaragua. This linear depression trends approximately N75°E, exhibits 12–15 m of vertical offset, is not traceable westward to Maderas volcano, and shallows significantly to the east. VE
Journal Article
Journal: Economic Geology
Published: 01 August 1981
Economic Geology (1981) 76 (5): 1096–1117.
... of the mineralized system at Pueblo Viejo resemble active hot spring systems such as Wairakei, New Zealand, and its environment of formation probably resembled that of the Quaternary volcano chain which crosses Lake Managua in Nicaragua. GeoRef, Copyright 2006, American Geological Institute. Abstract, Copyright...
Journal Article
Published: 01 August 1974
Bulletin of the Seismological Society of America (1974) 64 (4): 1031.
...R. D. Brown, Jr.; P. L. Ward; George Plafker abstract The Managua, Nicaragua, earthquake of December 23, 1972 (body-wave magnitude of 5.6, surface-wave magnitude of 6.2), and its aftershocks strongly affected an area of about 27 km 2 centered on Managua. Within this area, over 11,000 people were...
Journal Article
Journal: GSA Bulletin
Published: 01 July 1973
GSA Bulletin (1973) 84 (7): 2371–2388.
... of the ocean floor. Three principal areas of ash deposition have been delineated, with probable source areas in Guatemala, El Salvador, Nicaragua, and Colombia or Ecuador. Analyses of continental pumice samples indicate vents near the Tecpán-Chimaltenango basin in the Guatemalan Highlands and the Lake...
Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 September 1972
AAPG Bulletin (1972) 56 (9): 1602–1660.
..., and in the south-central Lake Maracaibo contract blocks, resulted in dry holes. Additional exploratory drilling off the east coast of Nicaragua was discouraging; 15 tests have been drilled in this area since 1968, none successful. Results in the Argentine offshore were likewise disappointing. Seven wildcats and 2...
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First thumbnail for: Petroleum Developments in South America, Central A...
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Journal Article
Journal: AAPG Bulletin
Published: 01 September 1971
AAPG Bulletin (1971) 55 (9): 1418–1482.
... in the south part of Lake Maracaibo. On the discouraging side was the unsuccessful offshore exploratory drilling in Argentina and Nicaragua. Although the area covered by this review has not experienced the spectacular increase in production rate achieved in other parts of the world, it has nevertheless had...
FIGURES
First thumbnail for: Review of 1970 Petroleum Developments in South Ame...
Second thumbnail for: Review of 1970 Petroleum Developments in South Ame...
Third thumbnail for: Review of 1970 Petroleum Developments in South Ame...