Tucurá Fault

Coordinates: 07°40′40″N 76°30′00″W / 7.67778°N 76.50000°W / 7.67778; -76.50000
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Tucurá Fault
Falla de Tucurá
Age
Quaternary
OrogenyAndean

The Tucurá Fault (

strike of 356 ± 4 in the Sinú-San Jacinto Basin and the Central Ranges of the Colombian Andes. The fault is considered active because of three MW
5.7-6.7 earthquakes associated with the Tucurá Fault occurring in the twentieth century.

Etymology

The fault is named after Tucurá.[1]

Description

The Tucura Fault is located in the northern part of the Central Ranges of the Colombian Andes, west of the Romeral Fault System. It extends from the Paderisco River in the south to the Sinú Valley in the north, where it crosses the Serranía de Abibe. The fault crosscuts middle and upper Tertiary folded marine sedimentary rocks and Quaternary alluvial deposits. The fault controls drainage, forms linear ridges, topographic lineaments, and fault scarps about 4 metres (13 ft) high on Quaternary terraces south of the town of Dabeiba, Antioquia. There are strong linear features on the right margin of the Esmeralda and Sinú Rivers; these include fault saddles and slight slope changes in alluvial terraces. Tertiary rock units are thrust over Quaternary deposits and striae are found on the shear planes.[1]

The fault is probably active with three earthquakes occurring in the twentieth century in the vicinity of the fault, February 12, 1952 (MW 6.7), December 3, 1970 (MW 5.7) and August 31, 1977 (MW 5.7). The slip rate is estimated at 0.2 to 1 millimetre (0.0079 to 0.0394 in) per year.[1]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c Paris et al., 2000, p.13

Bibliography

Further reading

  • Page, W.D. 1986. Seismic geology and seismicity of Northwestern Colombia, 1–200. San Francisco, California, Woodward-Clyde Consultants Report for ISA and Integral Ltda., Medellín.