@phdthesis{LauerDuenkelberg2023, author = {Lauer-D{\"u}nkelberg, Gregor}, title = {Extensional deformation and landscape evolution of the Central Andean Plateau}, doi = {10.25932/publishup-61759}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-617593}, school = {Universit{\"a}t Potsdam}, pages = {xviii, 195}, year = {2023}, abstract = {Mountain ranges can fundamentally influence the physical and and chemical processes that shape Earths' surface. With elevations of up to several kilometers they create climatic enclaves by interacting with atmospheric circulation and hydrologic systems, thus leading to a specific distribution of flora and fauna. As a result, the interiors of many Cenozoic mountain ranges are characterized by an arid climate, internally drained and sediment-filled basins, as well as unique ecosystems that are isolated from the adjacent humid, low-elevation regions along their flanks and forelands. These high-altitude interiors of orogens are often characterized by low relief and coalesced sedimentary basins, commonly referred to as plateaus, tectono-geomorphic entities that result from the complex interactions between mantle-driven geological and tectonic conditions and superposed atmospheric and hydrological processes. The efficiency of these processes and the fate of orogenic plateaus is therefore closely tied to the balance of constructive and destructive processes - tectonic uplift and erosion, respectively. In numerous geological studies it has been shown that mountain ranges are delicate systems that can be obliterated by an imbalance of these underlying forces. As such, Cenozoic mountain ranges might not persist on long geological timescales and will be destroyed by erosion or tectonic collapse. Advancing headward erosion of river systems that drain the flanks of the orogen may ultimately sever the internal drainage conditions and the maintenance of storage of sediments within the plateau, leading to destruction of plateau morphology and connectivity with the foreland. Orogenic collapse may be associated with the changeover from a compressional stress field with regional shortening and topographic growth, to a tensional stress field with regional extensional deformation and ensuing incision of the plateau. While the latter case is well-expressed by active extensional faults in the interior parts of the Tibetan Plateau and the Himalaya, for example, the former has been attributed to have breached the internally drained areas of the high-elevation sectors of the Iranian Plateau. In the case of the Andes of South America and their internally drained Altiplano-Puna Plateau, signs of both processes have been previously described. However, in the orogenic collapse scenario the nature of the extensional structures had been primarily investigated in the northern and southern terminations of the plateau; in some cases, the extensional faults were even regarded to be inactive. After a shallow earthquake in 2020 within the Eastern Cordillera of Argentina that was associated with extensional deformation, the state of active deformation and the character of the stress field in the central parts of the plateau received renewed interest to explain a series of extensional structures in the northernmost sectors of the plateau in north-western Argentina. This study addresses (1) the issue of tectonic orogenic collapse of the Andes and the destruction of plateau morphology by studying the fill and erosion history of the central eastern Andean Plateau using sedimentological and geochronological data and (2) the kinematics, timing and magnitude of extensional structures that form well-expressed fault scarps in sediments of the regional San Juan del Oro surface, which is an integral part of the Andean Plateau and adjacent morphotectonic provinces to the east. Importantly, sediment properties and depositional ages document that the San Juan del Oro Surface was not part of the internally-drained Andean Plateau, but rather associated with a foreland-directed drainage system, which was modified by the Andean orogeny and that became successively incorporated into the orogen by the eastward-migration of the Andean deformation front during late Miocene - Pliocene time. Structural and geomorphic observations within the plateau indicate that extensional processes must have been repeatedly active between the late Miocene and Holocene supporting the notion of plateau-wide extensional processes, potentially associated with Mw ~ 7 earthquakes. The close relationship between extensional joints and fault orientations underscores that 3 was oriented horizontally in NW-SE direction and 1 was vertical. This unambiguously documents that the observed deformation is related to gravitational forces that drive the orogenic collapse of the plateau. Applied geochronological analyses suggest that normal faulting in the northern Puna was active at about 3 Ma, based on paired cosmogenic nuclide dating of sediment fill units. Possibly due to regional normal faulting the drainage system within the plateau was modified, promoting fluvial incision.}, language = {en} } @article{ScherlerSchwanghart2020, author = {Scherler, Dirk and Schwanghart, Wolfgang}, title = {Drainage divide networks}, series = {Earth surface dynamics}, volume = {8}, journal = {Earth surface dynamics}, number = {2}, publisher = {Copernicus}, address = {G{\"o}ttingen}, issn = {2196-6311}, doi = {10.5194/esurf-8-261-2020}, pages = {261 -- 274}, year = {2020}, abstract = {Drainage divides are organized into tree-like networks that may record information about drainage divide mobility. However, views diverge about how to best assess divide mobility. Here, we apply a new approach of automatically extracting and ordering drainage divide networks from digital elevation models to results from landscape evolution model experiments. We compared landscapes perturbed by strike-slip faulting and spatiotemporal variations in erodibility to a reference model to assess which topographic metrics (hillslope relief, flow distance, and chi) are diagnostic of divide mobility. Results show that divide segments that are a minimum distance of similar to 5 km from river confluences strive to attain constant values of hillslope relief and flow distance to the nearest stream. Disruptions of such patterns can be related to mobile divides that are lower than stable divides, closer to streams, and often asymmetric in shape. In general, we observe that drainage divides high up in the network, i.e., at great distances from river confluences, are more susceptible to disruptions than divides closer to these confluences and are thus more likely to record disturbance for a longer time period. We found that across-divide differences in hillslope relief proved more useful for assessing divide migration than other tested metrics. However, even stable drainage divide networks exhibit across-divide differences in any of the studied topographic metrics. Finally, we propose a new metric to quantify the connectivity of divide junctions.}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Pons2023, author = {Pons, Micha{\"e}l}, title = {The Nature of the tectonic shortening in Central Andes}, doi = {10.25932/publishup-60089}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-600892}, school = {Universit{\"a}t Potsdam}, pages = {160}, year = {2023}, abstract = {The Andean Cordillera is a mountain range located at the western South American margin and is part of the Eastern- Circum-Pacific orogenic Belt. The ~7000 km long mountain range is one of the longest on Earth and hosts the second largest orogenic plateau in the world, the Altiplano-Puna plateau. The Andes are known as a non-collisional subduction-type orogen which developed as a result of the interaction between the subducted oceanic Nazca plate and the South American continental plate. The different Andean segments exhibit along-strike variations of morphotectonic provinces characterized by different elevations, volcanic activity, deformation styles, crustal thickness, shortening magnitude and oceanic plate geometry. Most of the present-day elevation can be explained by crustal shortening in the last ~50 Ma, with the shortening magnitude decreasing from ~300 km in the central (15°S-30°S) segment to less than half that in the southern part (30°S-40°S). Several factors were proposed that might control the magnitude and acceleration of shortening of the Central Andes in the last 15 Ma. One important factor is likely the slab geometry. At 27-33°S, the slab dips horizontally at ~100 km depth due to the subduction of the buoyant Juan Fernandez Ridge, forming the Pampean flat-slab. This horizontal subduction is thought to influence the thermo-mechanical state of the Sierras Pampeanas foreland, for instance, by strengthening the lithosphere and promoting the thick-skinned propagation of deformation to the east, resulting in the uplift of the Sierras Pampeanas basement blocks. The flat-slab has migrated southwards from the Altiplano latitude at ~30 Ma to its present-day position and the processes and consequences associated to its passage on the contemporaneous acceleration of the shortening rate in Central Andes remain unclear. Although the passage of the flat-slab could offer an explanation to the acceleration of the shortening, the timing does not explain the two pulses of shortening at about 15 Ma and 4 Ma that are suggested from geological observations. I hypothesize that deformation in the Central Andes is controlled by a complex interaction between the subduction dynamics of the Nazca plate and the dynamic strengthening and weakening of the South American plate due to several upper plate processes. To test this hypothesis, a detailed investigation into the role of the flat-slab, the structural inheritance of the continental plate, and the subduction dynamics in the Andes is needed. Therefore, I have built two classes of numerical thermo-mechanical models: (i) The first class of models are a series of generic E-W-oriented high-resolution 2D subduction models thatinclude flat subduction in order to investigate the role of the subduction dynamics on the temporal variability of the shortening rate in the Central Andes at Altiplano latitudes (~21°S). The shortening rate from the models was then validated with the observed tectonic shortening rate in the Central Andes. (ii) The second class of models are a series of 3D data-driven models of the present-day Pampean flat-slab configuration and the Sierras Pampeanas (26-42°S). The models aim to investigate the relative contribution of the present-day flat subduction and inherited structures in the continental lithosphere on the strain localization. Both model classes were built using the advanced finite element geodynamic code ASPECT. The first main finding of this work is to suggest that the temporal variability of shortening in the Central Andes is primarily controlled by the subduction dynamics of the Nazca plate while it penetrates into the mantle transition zone. These dynamics depends on the westward velocity of the South American plate that provides the main crustal shortening force to the Andes and forces the trench to retreat. When the subducting plate reaches the lower mantle, it buckles on it-self until the forced trench retreat causes the slab to steepen in the upper mantle in contrast with the classical slab-anchoring model. The steepening of the slab hinders the trench causing it to resist the advancing South American plate, resulting in the pulsatile shortening. This buckling and steepening subduction regime could have been initiated because of the overall decrease in the westwards velocity of the South American plate. In addition, the passage of the flat-slab is required to promote the shortening of the continental plate because flat subduction scrapes the mantle lithosphere, thus weakening the continental plate. This process contributes to the efficient shortening when the trench is hindered, followed by mantle lithosphere delamination at ~20 Ma. Finally, the underthrusting of the Brazilian cratonic shield beneath the orogen occurs at ~11 Ma due to the mechanical weakening of the thick sediments covered the shield margin, and due to the decreasing resistance of the weakened lithosphere of the orogen. The second main finding of this work is to suggest that the cold flat-slab strengthens the overriding continental lithosphere and prevents strain localization. Therefore, the deformation is transmitted to the eastern front of the flat-slab segment by the shear stress operating at the subduction interface, thus the flat-slab acts like an indenter that "bulldozes" the mantle-keel of the continental lithosphere. The offset in the propagation of deformation to the east between the flat and steeper slab segments in the south causes the formation of a transpressive dextral shear zone. Here, inherited faults of past tectonic events are reactivated and further localize the deformation in an en-echelon strike-slip shear zone, through a mechanism that I refer to as "flat-slab conveyor". Specifically, the shallowing of the flat-slab causes the lateral deformation, which explains the timing of multiple geological events preceding the arrival of the flat-slab at 33°S. These include the onset of the compression and of the transition between thin to thick-skinned deformation styles resulting from the crustal contraction of the crust in the Sierras Pampeanas some 10 and 6 Myr before the Juan Fernandez Ridge collision at that latitude, respectively.}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Metzger2023, author = {Metzger, Sabrina}, title = {Neotectonic deformation over space and time as observed by space-based geodesy}, doi = {10.25932/publishup-59922}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-599225}, school = {Universit{\"a}t Potsdam}, pages = {V, 217}, year = {2023}, abstract = {Alfred Wegeners ideas on continental drift were doubted for several decades until the discovery of polarization changes at the Atlantic seafloor and the seismic catalogs imaging oceanic subduction underneath the continental crust (Wadati-Benioff Zone). It took another 20 years until plate motion could be directly observed and quantified by using space geodesy. Since then, it is unthinkable to do neotectonic research without the use of satellite-based methods. Thanks to a tremendeous increase of instrumental observations in space and time over the last decades we significantly increased our knowledge on the complexity of the seismic cycle, that is, the interplay of tectonic stress build up and release. Our classical assumption, earthquakes were the only significant phenomena of strain release previously accumulated in a linear fashion, is outdated. We now know that this concept is actually decorated with a wide range of slow and fast processes such as triggered slip, afterslip, post-seismic and visco-elastic relaxation of the lower crust, dynamic pore-pressure changes in the elastic crust, aseismic creep, slow slip events and seismic swarms. On the basis of eleven peer-reviewed papers studies I here present the diversity of crustal deformation processes. Based on time-series analyses of radar imagery and satellited-based positioning data I quantify tectonic surface deformation and use numerical and analytical models and independent geologic and seismologic data to better understand the underlying crustal processes. The main part of my work focuses on the deformation observed in the Pamir, the Hindu Kush and the Tian Shan that together build the highly active continental collision zone between Northwest-India and Eurasia. Centered around the Sarez earthquake that ruptured the center of the Pamir in 2015 I present diverse examples of crustal deformation phenomena. Driver of the deformation is the Indian indenter, bulldozing into the Pamir, compressing the orogen that then collapses westward into the Tajik depression. A second natural observatory of mine to study tectonic deformation is the oceanic subduction zone in Chile that repeatedly hosts large earthquakes of magnitude 8 and more. These are best to study post-seismic relaxation processes and coupling of large earthquake. My findings nicely illustrate how complex fashion and how much the different deformation phenomena are coupled in space and time. My publications contribute to the awareness that the classical concept of the seismic cycle needs to be revised, which, in turn, has a large influence in the classical, probabilistic seismic hazard assessment that primarily relies on statistically solid recurrence times.}, language = {en} } @article{MorishitaLazeckyWrightetal.2020, author = {Morishita, Yu and Lazecky, Milan and Wright, Tim J. and Weiss, Jonathan R. and Elliott, John R. and Hooper, Andy}, title = {LiCSBAS}, series = {Remote sensing}, volume = {12}, journal = {Remote sensing}, number = {3}, publisher = {MDPI}, address = {Basel}, issn = {2072-4292}, doi = {10.3390/rs12030424}, pages = {29}, year = {2020}, abstract = {For the past five years, the 2-satellite Sentinel-1 constellation has provided abundant and useful Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) data, which have the potential to reveal global ground surface deformation at high spatial and temporal resolutions. However, for most users, fully exploiting the large amount of associated data is challenging, especially over wide areas. To help address this challenge, we have developed LiCSBAS, an open-source SAR interferometry (InSAR) time series analysis package that integrates with the automated Sentinel-1 InSAR processor (LiCSAR). LiCSBAS utilizes freely available LiCSAR products, and users can save processing time and disk space while obtaining the results of InSAR time series analysis. In the LiCSBAS processing scheme, interferograms with many unwrapping errors are automatically identified by loop closure and removed. Reliable time series and velocities are derived with the aid of masking using several noise indices. The easy implementation of atmospheric corrections to reduce noise is achieved with the Generic Atmospheric Correction Online Service for InSAR (GACOS). Using case studies in southern Tohoku and the Echigo Plain, Japan, we demonstrate that LiCSBAS applied to LiCSAR products can detect both large-scale (>100 km) and localized (similar to km) relative displacements with an accuracy of <1 cm/epoch and similar to 2 mm/yr. We detect displacements with different temporal characteristics, including linear, periodic, and episodic, in Niigata, Ojiya, and Sanjo City, respectively. LiCSBAS and LiCSAR products facilitate greater exploitation of globally available and abundant SAR datasets and enhance their applications for scientific research and societal benefit.}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Riedl2021, author = {Riedl, Simon}, title = {Active tectonics in the Kenya Rift}, doi = {10.25932/publishup-53855}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-538552}, school = {Universit{\"a}t Potsdam}, pages = {xi, 207}, year = {2021}, abstract = {Magmatische und tektonisch aktive Grabenzonen (Rifts) stellen die Vorstufen entstehender Plattengrenzen dar. Diese sich spreizenden tektonischen Provinzen zeichnen sich durch allgegenw{\"a}rtige Abschiebungen aus, und die r{\"a}umliche Verteilung, die Geometrie, und das Alter dieser Abschiebungen l{\"a}sst R{\"u}ckschl{\"u}sse auf die r{\"a}umlichen und zeitlichen Zusammenh{\"a}nge zwischen tektonischer Deformation, Magmatismus und langwelliger Krustendeformation in Rifts zu. Diese Arbeit konzentriert sich auf die St{\"o}rungsaktivit{\"a}t im Kenia-Rift des k{\"a}nozoischen Ostafrikanischen Grabensystems im Zeitraum zwischen dem mittleren Pleistoz{\"a}n und dem Holoz{\"a}n. Um die fr{\"u}hen Stadien der Entstehung kontinentaler Plattengrenzen zu untersuchen, wird in dieser Arbeit eine zeitlich gemittelte minimale Extensionsrate f{\"u}r den inneren Graben des N{\"o}rdlichen Kenia-Rifts (NKR) f{\"u}r die letzten 0,5 Mio Jahre abgeleitet. Die Analyse beruht auf Messungen mit Hilfe des digitalen TanDEM-X-H{\"o}henmodells, um die Abschiebungen entlang der vulkanisch-tektonischen Achse des inneren Grabens des NKR zu kartieren und deren Versatzbetr{\"a}ge zu bestimmen. Mithilfe von vorhandenen Geochronologiedaten der deformierten vulkanischen Einheiten sowie in dieser Arbeit erstellten ⁴⁰Ar/³⁹Ar-Datierungen werden zeitlich gemittelte Extensionsraten berechnet. Die Auswertungen zeigen, dass im inneren Graben des NKR die langfristige Extensionsrate f{\"u}r mittelpleistoz{\"a}ne bis rezente St{\"o}rungen Mindestwerte von 1,0 bis 1,6 mm yr⁻¹ aufweist und lokal allerdings auch Werte bis zu 2,0 mm yr⁻¹ existieren. In Anbetracht der nahezu inaktiven Randst{\"o}rungen des NKR zeigt sich somit, dass sich die Extension auf die Region der aktiven vulkanisch-tektonischen Achse im inneren Graben konzentriert und somit ein fortgeschrittenes Stadium kontinentaler Extensionsprozesse im NKR vorliegt. In dieser Arbeit wird diese r{\"a}umlich fokussierte Extension zudem im Rahmen einer St{\"o}rungsanalyse der j{\"u}ngsten vulkanischen Erscheinungen des Kenia-Rifts betrachtet. Die Arbeit analysiert mithilfe von Gel{\"a}ndekartierungen und eines auf Luftbildern basierenden Gel{\"a}ndemodells die St{\"o}rungscharakteristika der etwa 36 tausend Jahre alten Menengai-Kaldera und der umliegenden Gebiete im zentralen Kenia-Rift. Im Allgemeinen sind die holoz{\"a}nen St{\"o}rungen innerhalb des Rifts reine, NNO-streichende Abschiebungen, die somit das gegenw{\"a}rtige tektonische Spannungsfeld wiederspiegeln; innerhalb der Menengai-Kaldera sind die jungen Strukturen jedoch von andauernder magmatischer Aktivit{\"a}t und von Aufdomung {\"u}berpr{\"a}gt. Die Kaldera befindet sich im Zentrum eines sich aktiv dehnenden Riftsegments und zusammen mit den anderen quart{\"a}ren Vulkanen des Kenia-Rifts lassen sich diese Bereiche als Kernpunkte der extensionalen St{\"o}rungsaktivit{\"a}t verstehen, die letztlich zu einer weiter entwickelten Phase magmengest{\"u}tzter Kontinentalseparation f{\"u}hren werden. Die bereits seit dem Terti{\"a}r andauernde St{\"o}rungsaktivit{\"a}t im Kenia-Rift f{\"u}hrt zur Zergliederung der gr{\"o}ßeren Rift-Senken in kleinere Segmente und beeinflusst die Sedimentologie und die Hydrologie dieser Riftbecken. Gegenw{\"a}rtig sind die meisten, durch St{\"o}rungen begrenzten Becken des Kenia-Rifts hydrologisch isoliert, sie waren aber w{\"a}hrend feuchter Klimaphasen hydrologisch miteinander verbunden; in dieser Arbeit untersuche ich deshalb auch diese hydrologische Verbindung der Rift-Becken f{\"u}r die Zeit der Afrikanischen Feuchteperiode des fr{\"u}hen Holoz{\"a}ns. Mithilfe der Analyse von digitalen Gel{\"a}ndemodellen, unter Ber{\"u}cksichtigung von geomorphologischen Anzeigern f{\"u}r Seespiegelhochst{\"a}nde, Radiokarbondatierungen und einer {\"U}bersicht {\"u}ber Fossiliendaten konnten zwei kaskadierende Flusssysteme aus diesen Daten abgeleitet werden: eine Flusskaskade in Richtung S{\"u}den und eine in Richtung Norden. Beide Kaskaden haben die derzeit isolierten Becken w{\"a}hrend des fr{\"u}hen Holoz{\"a}ns durch {\"u}berlaufende Seen und eingeschnittene Schluchten miteinander verbunden. Diese hydrologische Verbindung f{\"u}hrte zu der Ausbreitung aquatischer Fauna entlang des Rifts, und gleichzeitig stellte die Wasserscheide zwischen den beiden Flusssystemen den einzigen terrestrischen Ausbreitungskorridor dar, der eine {\"U}berquerung des Kenia-Rifts erm{\"o}glichte. Diese tektonisch-geomorphologische Rekonstruktion erkl{\"a}rt die heute isolierten Vorkommen nilotischer Fischarten in den Riftseen Kenias sowie die isolierten Vorkommen Guineo-Congolischer S{\"a}ugetiere in W{\"a}ldern {\"o}stlich des Kenia-Rifts, die sich {\"u}ber die Wasserscheide im Kenia-Rift ausbreiten konnten. Auf l{\"a}ngeren Zeitskalen sind solche Phasen hydrologischer Verbindung und Phasen der Isolation wiederholt aufgetreten und zeigen sich in wechselnden pal{\"a}o{\"o}kologischen Indikatoren in Sedimentbohrkernen. Hier stelle ich einen Sedimentbohrkern aus dem Koora-Becken des S{\"u}dlichen Kenia-Rifts vor, der einen Datensatz der Pal{\"a}o-Umweltbedingungen der letzten 1 Million Jahre beinhaltet. Dieser Datensatz zeigt, dass etwa vor 400 tausend Jahren die zuvor relativ stabilen Umweltbedingungen zum Erliegen kamen und tektonische, hydrologische und {\"o}kologische Ver{\"a}nderungen dazu f{\"u}hrten, dass die Wasserverf{\"u}gbarkeit, die Grasland-Vergesellschaftungen und die Bedeckung durch Baumvegetation zunehmend st{\"a}rkeren und h{\"a}ufigeren Schwankungen unterlagen. Diese großen Ver{\"a}nderungen fallen zeitlich mit Phasen zusammen, in denen das s{\"u}dliche Becken des Kenia-Rifts von vulkanischer und tektonischer Aktivit{\"a}t besonders betroffen war. Die vorliegende Arbeit zeigt deshalb deutlich, inwiefern die tektonischen und geomorphologischen Gegebenheiten im Zuge einer zeitlich langanhaltenden Extension die Hydrologie, die Pal{\"a}o-Umweltbedingungen sowie die Biodiversit{\"a}t einer Riftzone beeinflussen k{\"o}nnen.}, language = {en} } @article{vonSpechtHeidbachCottonetal.2018, author = {von Specht, Sebastian and Heidbach, Oliver and Cotton, Fabrice and Zang, Arno}, title = {Uncertainty reduction of stress tensor inversion with data-driven catalogue selection}, series = {Geophysical journal international}, volume = {214}, journal = {Geophysical journal international}, number = {3}, publisher = {Oxford Univ. Press}, address = {Oxford}, issn = {0956-540X}, doi = {10.1093/gji/ggy240}, pages = {2250 -- 2263}, year = {2018}, abstract = {The selection of earthquake focal mechanisms (FMs) for stress tensor inversion (STI) is commonly done on a spatial basis, that is, hypocentres. However, this selection approach may include data that are undesired, for example, by mixing events that are caused by different stress tensors when for the STI a single stress tensor is assumed. Due to the significant increase of FM data in the past decades, objective data-driven data selection is feasible, allowing more refined FM catalogues that avoid these issues and provide data weights for the STI routines. We present the application of angular classification with expectation-maximization (ACE) as a tool for data selection. ACE identifies clusters of FM without a priori information. The identified clusters can be used for the classification of the style-of-faulting and as weights of the FM data. We demonstrate that ACE effectively selects data that can be associated with a single stress tensor. Two application examples are given for weighted STI from South America. We use the resulting clusters and weights as a priori information for an STI for these regions and show that uncertainties of the stress tensor estimates are reduced significantly.}, language = {en} } @phdthesis{Barrionuevo2020, author = {Barrionuevo, Mat{\´i}as}, title = {The role of the upper plate in the Andean tectonic evolution (33-36°S): insights from structural geology and numerical modeling}, doi = {10.25932/publishup-51590}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-515909}, school = {Universit{\"a}t Potsdam}, pages = {148, S2}, year = {2020}, abstract = {Los Andes Centrales del Sur (33-36°S) son un gran laboratorio para el estudio de los procesos de deformaci{\´o}n orog{\´e}nica, donde las condiciones de borde, como la geometr{\´i}a de la placa subductada, imponen un importante control sobre la deformaci{\´o}n andina. Por otro lado, la Placa Sudamericana presenta una serie de heterogeneidades que tambi{\´e}n imparten un control sobre el modo de deformaci{\´o}n. El objetivo de esta tesis es probar el control de este {\´u}ltimo factor sobre la construcci{\´o}n del sistema orog{\´e}nico andino. A partir de la integraci{\´o}n de la informaci{\´o}n superficial y de subsuelo en el {\´a}rea sur (34°-36°S), se estudi{\´o} la evoluci{\´o}n de la deformaci{\´o}n andina sobre el segmento de subducci{\´o}n normal. Se desarroll{\´o} un modelo estructural que eval{\´u}a el estado de esfuerzos desde el Mioceno hasta la actualidad, el rol de estructuras previas y su influencia en la migraci{\´o}n de fluidos. Con estos datos y publicaciones previas de la zona norte del {\´a}rea de estudio (33°-34ºS), se realiz{\´o} un modelado num{\´e}rico geodin{\´a}mico para probar la hip{\´o}tesis del papel de las heterogeneidades de la placa superior en la evoluci{\´o}n andina. Se utilizaron dos c{\´o}digos (LAPEX-2D y ASPECT) basados en elementos finitos/diferencias finitas, que simulan el comportamiento de materiales con reolog{\´i}as elastoviscopl{\´a}sticas bajo deformaci{\´o}n. Los resultados del modelado sugieren que la deformaci{\´o}n contraccional de la placa superior est{\´a} significativamente controlada por la resistencia de la lit{\´o}sfera, que est{\´a} definida por la composici{\´o}n de la corteza superior e inferior y por la proporci{\´o}n del manto litosf{\´e}rico, que a su vez est{\´a} definida por eventos tect{\´o}nicos previos. Estos eventos previos tambi{\´e}n definieron la composici{\´o}n de la corteza y su geometr{\´i}a, que es otro factor que controla la localizaci{\´o}n de la deformaci{\´o}n. Con una composici{\´o}n de corteza inferior m{\´a}s f{\´e}lsica, la deformaci{\´o}n sigue un modo de cizalla pura mientras que las composiciones m{\´a}s m{\´a}ficas provocan un modo de deformaci{\´o}n tipo cizalla simple. Por otro lado, observamos que el espesor inicial de la lit{\´o}sfera controla la localizaci{\´o}n de la deformaci{\´o}n, donde zonas con lit{\´o}sfera m{\´a}s fina es propensa a concentrar la deformaci{\´o}n. Un l{\´i}mite lit{\´o}sfera-asten{\´o}sfera asim{\´e}trico, como resultado del flujo de la cu{\~n}a mant{\´e}lica tiende a generar despegues vergentes al E.}, language = {en} } @misc{MorishitaLazeckyWrightetal.2020, author = {Morishita, Yu and Lazecky, Milan and Wright, Tim J. and Weiss, Jonathan R. and Elliott, John R. and Hooper, Andy}, title = {LiCSBAS}, series = {Postprints der Universit{\"a}t Potsdam : Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe}, journal = {Postprints der Universit{\"a}t Potsdam : Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe}, number = {1078}, issn = {1866-8372}, doi = {10.25932/publishup-47243}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-472431}, pages = {31}, year = {2020}, abstract = {For the past five years, the 2-satellite Sentinel-1 constellation has provided abundant and useful Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) data, which have the potential to reveal global ground surface deformation at high spatial and temporal resolutions. However, for most users, fully exploiting the large amount of associated data is challenging, especially over wide areas. To help address this challenge, we have developed LiCSBAS, an open-source SAR interferometry (InSAR) time series analysis package that integrates with the automated Sentinel-1 InSAR processor (LiCSAR). LiCSBAS utilizes freely available LiCSAR products, and users can save processing time and disk space while obtaining the results of InSAR time series analysis. In the LiCSBAS processing scheme, interferograms with many unwrapping errors are automatically identified by loop closure and removed. Reliable time series and velocities are derived with the aid of masking using several noise indices. The easy implementation of atmospheric corrections to reduce noise is achieved with the Generic Atmospheric Correction Online Service for InSAR (GACOS). Using case studies in southern Tohoku and the Echigo Plain, Japan, we demonstrate that LiCSBAS applied to LiCSAR products can detect both large-scale (>100 km) and localized (~km) relative displacements with an accuracy of <1 cm/epoch and ~2 mm/yr. We detect displacements with different temporal characteristics, including linear, periodic, and episodic, in Niigata, Ojiya, and Sanjo City, respectively. LiCSBAS and LiCSAR products facilitate greater exploitation of globally available and abundant SAR datasets and enhance their applications for scientific research and societal benefit.}, language = {en} } @article{ForteWhippleBookhagenetal.2016, author = {Forte, Adam M. and Whipple, Kelin X. and Bookhagen, Bodo and Rossi, Matthew W.}, title = {Decoupling of modern shortening rates, climate, and topography in the Caucasus}, series = {Earth \& planetary science letters}, volume = {449}, journal = {Earth \& planetary science letters}, publisher = {Elsevier}, address = {Amsterdam}, issn = {0012-821X}, doi = {10.1016/j.epsl.2016.06.013}, pages = {282 -- 294}, year = {2016}, abstract = {The Greater and Lesser Caucasus mountains and their associated foreland basins contain similar rock types, experience a similar two-fold, along-strike variation in mean annual precipitation, and were affected by extreme base-level drops of the neighboring Caspian Sea. However, the two Caucasus ranges are characterized by decidedly different tectonic regimes and rates of deformation that are subject to moderate (less than an order of magnitude) gradients in climate, and thus allow for a unique opportunity to isolate the effects of climate and tectonics in the evolution of topography within active orogens. There is an apparent disconnect between modern climate, shortening rates, and topography of both the Greater Caucasus and Lesser Caucasus which exhibit remarkably similar topography along-strike despite the gradients in forcing. By combining multiple datasets, we examine plausible causes for this disconnect by presenting a detailed analysis of the topography of both ranges utilizing established relationships between catchment-mean erosion rates and topography (local relief, hillslope gradients, and channel steepness) and combining it with a synthesis of previously published low-temperature thermochronologic data. Modern climate of the Caucasus region is assessed through an analysis of remotely-sensed data (TRMM and MODIS) and historical streamflow data. Because along-strike variation in either erosional efficiency or thickness of accreted material fail to explain our observations, we suggest that the topography of both the western Lesser and Greater Caucasus are partially supported by different geodynamic forces. In the western Lesser Caucasus, high relief portions of the landscape likely reflect uplift related to ongoing mantle lithosphere delamination beneath the neighboring East Anatolian Plateau. In the Greater Caucasus, maintenance of high topography in the western portion of the range despite extremely low (<2-4 mm/y) modern convergence rates may be related to dynamic topography from detachment of the north-directed Greater Caucasus slab or to a recent slowing of convergence rates. Large-scale spatial gradients in climate are not reflected in the topography of the Caucasus and do not seem to exert any significant control on the tectonics or structure of either range. (C) 2016 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.}, language = {en} }