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Published December 2020 | Supplemental Material + Published
Journal Article Open

Reactivation of Fault Systems by Compartmentalized Hydrothermal Fluids in the Southern Andes Revealed by Magnetotelluric and Seismic Data

Abstract

In active volcanic arcs such as the Andean volcanic mountain belt, magmatically sourced fluids are channeled through the brittle crust by faults and fracture networks. In the Andes, volcanoes, geothermal springs, and major mineral deposits have a spatial and genetic relationship with NNE trending, margin‐parallel faults and margin‐oblique, NW trending Andean Transverse Faults (ATF). The Tinguiririca and Planchón‐Peteroa volcanoes in the Andean Southern Volcanic Zone (SVZ) demonstrate this relationship, as their spatially associated thermal springs show strike alignment to the NNE oriented El Fierro Thrust Fault System. We constrain the fault system architecture and its interaction with volcanically sourced hydrothermal fluids using a combined magnetotelluric (MT) and seismic survey that was deployed for 20 months. High‐conductivity zones are located along the axis of the active volcanic chain, delineating fluids and/or melt. A distinct WNW trending cluster of seismicity correlates with resistivity contrasts, considered to be a reactivated ATF. Seismicity occurs below 4 km, suggesting activity is limited to basement rocks, and the cessation of seismicity at 9 km delineates the local brittle‐ductile transition. As seismicity is not seen west of the El Fierro fault, we hypothesize that this structure plays a key role in compartmentalizing magmatically derived hydrothermal fluids to the east, where the fault zone acts as a barrier to cross‐fault fluid migration and channels fault‐parallel fluid flow to the surface from depth. Increases in fluid pressure above hydrostatic may facilitate reactivation. This site‐specific case study provides the first three‐dimensional seismic and MT observations of the mechanics behind the reactivation of an ATF.

Additional Information

© 2020 American Geophysical Union. Issue Online: 25 November 2020; Version of Record online: 25 November 2020; Accepted manuscript online: 29 October 2020; Manuscript accepted: 12 October 2020; Manuscript revised: 02 September 2020; Manuscript received: 21 November 2019. Funding was provided by NERC Grant NE/M004716/1 to T. M. M. and an RTSG to R. K. P. and A. S. M. G. from the London NERC DTP, with financial help from the Chilean National Fund for Scientific and Technological Development (FONDECYT: Grant Number 1141139), and the Canadian Centennial Scholarship Fund (CCSF), to whom we express our sincerest gratitude for making the study possible. We are very grateful to all of those involved in the field work, through the allotment of land to deploy our instruments, and the assistance in the logistics and/or labor of the deployment. For their incredible contribution to this effort, we would like to give special thanks to Mariel Castillo, Matias Cavieres, Manuel Dorr, Victorino Arauco, Gerd Seilfeld, Elias Lira, Nati and Mati Mohring, Jac Thomas, Emily Franklin, Pamela Prez‐Flores, James Strachan, Daniela Balladares, Steve Boon, John Browning, Ronny Figueroa, and Javiera Ruz. Broadband MT equipment was kindly provided by PUC and Universidad de Chile. Many thanks to Anna Kelbert for her support during the archival process and to Jared Peacock for his assistance in the use of MTPy (Peacock et al., 2019). Data Availability Statement: All MT transfer functions are publicly available on the IRIS EMTF archive (Kelbert et al., 2011) (listed under http://10.17611/DP/EMTF/UCL/CHILEMT). The UK seismic instruments and data management facilities were provided under Loan Number 1073 by SEIS‐UK at the University of Leicester. The facilities of SEIS‐UK are supported by the NERC under Agreement R8/H10/64. All seismic data are archived at IRIS (https://www.fdsn.org/networks/detail/6A_2017/). QuakeMigrate software is hosted in GitHub platform (https://github.com/QuakeMigrate/QuakeMigrate).

Attached Files

Published - 2019TC005997.pdf

Supplemental Material - tect21432-sup-0001-2019tc005997-si.pdf

Supplemental Material - tect21432-sup-0002-2019tc005997-ds01.xlsx

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Additional details

Created:
August 22, 2023
Modified:
October 23, 2023