Bibliographic Information

Subduction zones

edited by Larry J. Ruff, Hiroo Kanamori

Birkhäuser, 1988-1989

  • pt. 1 : U.S.
  • pt. 1 : Germany
  • pt. 2 : U.S.
  • pt. 2 : Germnay

Available at  / 22 libraries

Search this Book/Journal

Note

Reprint from Pure and applied geophysics (PAGEOPH), volume 128 (1988), no. 3/4 and volume 129 (1989), no. 1/2

Includes bibliograpies

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Volume

pt. 1 : Germany ISBN 9783764319281

Description

Reprint from Pure and Applied Geophysics (PAGEOPH), Volume 128 (1988), No. 3/4
Volume

pt. 2 : Germnay ISBN 9783764322724

Description

Subduction zones consume oceanic lithosphere and are an indispensible part of plate tectonics. Unlike the oceanic lithosphere production system which can be linked as a nearly continuous, albeit sinuous, strand around the earth, subduction zones are a rather dissociated group and are found in several isolated corners of the world. While plate tectonics can predict that subduction zones are required along certain plate boundaries, it does not stipulate how subduction zones initiate and develop. The preservation of newly created oceanic lithosphere and the propensity for spreading centers to fragment continents leaves a wealth of geological informa tion on the initiation and evolution of spreading. On the other hand, the subject of subduction initiation has little observational basis. To find such observations, we need to look at some muddled tectonic regimes. The Macquarie Ridge complex presents a natural laboratory for studies of subduction initiation. 2. Tectonics of the Macquarie Ridge Complex The Macquarie Ridge complex is a complicated physiographic feature that trends approximately north-south between South Island, New Zealand and the Pacific-Antarctica spreading center. This feature consists of a sequence of troughs and ridges, with Macquarie Island as the only exposed expression. The seismically active Macquarie Ridge complex (hereafter: MRC) is crudely continuous with the Tonga-Kermadec-New Zealand seismic activity. The basic physiographic features and seismicity of the MRC are shown in Figure I. The earthquake epicenters generally cluster about the bathymetric expression of the MRC.

Table of Contents

to subduction zones.- On the initiation of subduction zones.- Seismotectonics at the Trench-Trench-Trench triple junction off central Honshu.- Morphologic and geologic effects of the subduction of bathymetric highs.- Large earthquakes in the Macquarie Ridge Complex: Transitional tectonics and subduction initiation.- Estimation of strong ground motions from hypothetical earthquakes on the Cascadia subduction zone, Pacific Northwest.- Subduction and back-arc activity at the Hikurangi convergent margin, NewZealand.- An unusual zone of seismic coupling in the Bonin Arc: The 1972 Hachijo-Oki earthquakes and related seismicity.- Do trench sediments affect great earthquake occurence in subduction zones?.

by "Nielsen BookData"

Details

  • NCID
    BA06852506
  • ISBN
    • 0817619283
    • 3764319283
    • 0817622721
    • 3764322721
  • LCCN
    88039469
  • Country Code
    sz
  • Title Language Code
    eng
  • Text Language Code
    eng
  • Place of Publication
    Basel ; Boston
  • Pages/Volumes
    2 v.
  • Size
    24 cm
  • Classification
  • Subject Headings
Page Top