Now on ScienceBlogs: Telegraph: blame the rape victims - science says you can! [bioephemera]

Seed Media Group

The Week In ScienceBlogs: Sign up for our newsletter.

Highly Allochthonous

News and Commentary From the Wide World of Earth Science

Search

Profile

You're not missing much Chris Rowan is a geologist specialising in the dark arts of paleomagnetism, and getting people to pay him to travel to exotic destinations for fieldwork. Having drilled up New Zealand during his PhD, and South Africa in his first post-doc, he now works at the University of Edinburgh.

What the heck does 'Highly Allochthonous' mean?

Geoblogosphere latest


Chris on Twitter

Blog Facebook Page

Ye olde blog

Nature postdoc journal


Recent Comments

Recent Posts

Blogs I read

Categories

Archives

« Geopuzzle #6 | Main | State of the post-doc »

What plate tectonics doesn't tell you

Category: geologytectonics
Posted on: February 23, 2008 10:54 AM, by Chris Rowan

If you want to find a plate boundary, follow the earthquakes. Plates are internally rigid and move about the Earth's surface without deforming very much, so most of the world's tectonic activity occurs at the boundaries where different plates interact with each other.

global seismicity

The rigidity of a plate's interior means that if you know the speed and direction that the crust is moving at one point on a plate, you can calculate its motion at every point, and for two plates you can calculate the direction and magnitude of relative plate motions at any point on their shared boundary. This allows you to predict the broad style of deformation before you even look, because you already know whether the plates are moving apart, pushing together or sliding past each other. However, the details of how those relative motions are being accommodated at the boundary is not so easy to predict. Mid-ocean ridges, for example, consist of spreading segments separated by transform segments; two entirely different types of deformation accommodating exactly the same plate motions.

ridge.png

Things get even more complicated in continental crust, where a plate boundary is often not a discrete line you can stand astride like the meridian line in Greenwich, but is instead spread across many faults, across an area tens or even hundreds of kilometres across. The seismicity map above clearly shows this happening at the boundary between the Indian and Eurasian plates - earthquakes stretch considerably further north than the Himalayas, and even the Tibetan plateau. This distributed deformation opens up even more tectonic possibilities for accommodating relative plate motions. The figure below illustrates three possible arrangements in a convergent plate boundary zone: everything can be accommodated on one big thrust, but you might also get partioning of the oblique component of motion onto strike slip faults behind the main thrust, or even some of the motion being taken up by vertical-axis rotation of fault bounded blocks. Large scale plate motions might provide the boundary conditions of motion across a tectonic boundary, but there are clearly other factors that control its expression. I think there's still a lot that we don't understand about plate tectonics on the small scale.

conv.png

I do have a hunch, though, that one of the reasons that deformation in continental crust can be so complicated is that it is usually quite old, and has probably been deformed several times before in its long history. The scars of these past rifts and orogenies have been inherited in the form of old, inactive faults; pre-existing weaknesses that can be exploited in new episodes of deformation, because it is often mechanically easier to reactivate old fractures than rupture entirely new ones. However, because they are probably not optimally arranged to cope with the current plate motions, weird and wonderful combinations of reactivated faults from different episodes can be co-opted together, with new structures, or bulk rotation of crust between faults, accounting for any left over deformation. Just to make things even more interesting, these arrangements might have changed significantly as plate motions have evolved over time; different structures could have been active in the past, or the same faults might have been accommodating motion in completely different ways. Thus, trying to fully understand deformation in plate boundary zones is often a lot more complicated than it looks. Knowing the general rheological properties of the crust is important, but the unique tectonic history of every part of the world gives each area its own distinctive tectonic flavour, and fully understanding the patterns of faulting today in places like New Zealand may depend as much on understanding the past geological history of the region as it does on knowing current plate motions. Plenty to go hmmmm about, then.

Comments

1

There's an error in your mid-ocean ridge plate motion diagram. The lower transform fault has arrows showing left-lateral motion, but if considered in the context of the other plate motions shown (divergence between plates A and B) it ought to have a right-lateral sense of motion. (Unless you're trying to invoke some very screwy ridge migration.)

Posted by: Ron Schott | February 23, 2008 6:12 PM

2

Doh! Good spot - it's now fixed.

Posted by: Chris Rowan | February 25, 2008 1:50 AM

3

Chris, what is the source of your map and dates of the earthquakes shown on it? I am interested in having a look at some of the original data. Thank you!

Posted by: Barb | June 18, 2009 2:22 PM

Post a Comment

(Email is required for authentication purposes only. On some blogs, comments are moderated for spam, so your comment may not appear immediately.)





ScienceBlogs

Search ScienceBlogs:

Go to:

Advertisement
Advertisement

© 2006-2009 Seed Media Group LLC. ScienceBlogs is a registered trademark of Seed Media Group. All rights reserved.

Sites by Seed Media Group: Seed Media Group | ScienceBlogs | SEEDMAGAZINE.COM