The 6 November 1774 MI 6 Bolaños Graben Earthquake (Southern Basin and Range Province, West-Central Mexico): Macroseismic Observations and Neotectonic Implications

2020 ◽  
Vol 91 (5) ◽  
pp. 2473-2486 ◽  
Author(s):  
Max Suter

Abstract The continental part of west-central Mexico is characterized by the active extensional tectonic regimes of the Trans-Mexican volcanic belt and the adjacent southern Basin and Range Province. The deformation of the latter is distributed over several topographically very pronounced grabens and half-grabens (width 10–20 km, length ≤200  km; throw 1–2 km), including the Aguascalientes, Juchipila, Tlaltenango, and Bolaños grabens. Here, an A.D. 1774–1775 earthquake series in that area is documented based on numerous contemporary sources. The 6 November 1774 mainshock caused moderate-to-severe damage in several communities of the Bolaños graben, including the silver mining town of Bolaños, and moderate damage to communities in the Tlaltenango graben, such as the administrative center of Colotlán. Based on the macroseismic intensity distribution, the epicenter was in the Bolaños graben. The preferred magnitude of the mainshock is ∼6.0±0.5. No major historical earthquake had been reported previously from this region. Existing ground-shaking hazard models may, therefore, give a false sense of security. In the Bolaños graben, motion along the graben-bounding faults and the observed tilting of the graben shoulders has to be mostly younger than the 19.9 Ma age of the youngest basalt of the graben-shoulder stratigraphy. Its correlation across the western master fault indicates a 1300 m throw and a vertical long-term slip rate of 0.07  mm/yr. The observations of alluvial fan deposits juxtaposed against the footwall ignimbrites along the western master fault of the Bolaños graben, the displacement of alluvial fan deposits along secondary faults within the graben, and the existence of hot springs along the western boundary fault all are indicative of active deformation, and so is evidently the A.D. 1774 earthquake.

2019 ◽  
Vol 114 (6) ◽  
pp. 1095-1121
Author(s):  
John C. Mars ◽  
Gilpin R. Robinson ◽  
Jane M. Hammarstrom ◽  
Lukas Zürcher ◽  
Helen Whitney ◽  
...  

Abstract ArcGIS was used to spatially assess and rank potential porphyry copper deposits using Advanced Spaceborne Thermal Emission and Reflection Radiometer (ASTER) data together with geochemical and geologic datasets in order to estimate undiscovered deposits in the southern Basin and Range Province in the southwestern United States. The assessment was done using a traditional expert opinion three-part method and a prospectivity model developed using weights of evidence and logistic regression techniques to determine if ASTER data integrated with other geologic datasets can be used to find additional areas of prospectivity in well-explored permissive tracts. ASTER hydrothermal alteration data were expressed as 457 alteration polygons defined from a low-pass filtered alteration density map of combined argillic, phyllic, and propylitic rock units. Sediment stream samples were plotted as map grid data and used as spatial information in ASTER polygons. Gravity and magnetic data were also used to define basins greater than 1 km in depth. Each ASTER alteration polygon was ranked for porphyry copper potential using alteration types, spatial amounts of alteration, stream sediment geochemistry, lithology, polygon shape, proximity to other alteration polygons, and deposit and prospects data. Permissive tracts defined for the assessment in the southern Basin and Range Province include the Laramide Northwest, Laramide Southeast, Jurassic, and Tertiary tracts. Expert opinion estimates using the three-part assessment method resulted in a mean estimate of 17 undiscovered porphyry copper deposits, whereas the prospectivity modeling predicted a mean estimate of nine undiscovered deposits. In the well-explored Laramide Southeast tract, which contains the most deposits and has been explored for over 100 years, an average of 4.3 undiscovered deposits was estimated using ASTER alteration polygon data versus 2.8 undiscovered deposits without ASTER data. The Tertiary tract, which contains the largest number of ASTER alteration polygons not associated with known Tertiary deposits, was predicted to contain the most undiscovered resources in the southern Basin and Range Province.


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