FLAT SLAB SUBDUCTION IN LATIN AMERICA IN THE CONTEXT OF ONGOING SUBDUCTION OF TERTIARY OCEANIC LITHOSPHERE, SUBDUCTING SEAMOUNTS AND RIDGES, AND CONTINENTAL UPPER PLATES: IMPLICATIONS FOR SLAB MORPHOLOGY, SEISMICITY STRUCTURE AND FOCAL MECHANISMS, AND SEISMIC HAZARDS
The combination of young oceanic plate age, relatively fast subduction, continental upper plates, and abundant offshore volcanic ridges and seamounts produces a unique suite of slab morphologies and profiles of seismic hazards in Latin America. True flat-slab subduction zones are presently unique to Latin America. In the south, three of the four boundaries that define these zones correlate with present-day or past collisions of large volcanic ridges and/or seamount chains. Several such chains are colliding with the South American forearc along the Chile Trench between the Juan Fernandez and Nazca Ridges. Additional evidence of prior collisions is found in trench-slope re-entrants. Extreme clustering of intermediate-depth earthquakes east of the Chile trench is also thought to be a consequence of seamount/ridge subduction. Further aspects of flat-slab discussed are: (1) Closely-spaced double seismic seismic zones, including paired crustal and mantle events near the outer rise and the roles of subducting seamounts and ridges. (2) High flexural strain rates (double flexure). (3) Forearc basin subsidence. (4) Large, shallow high-frequency intraslab earthquakes that have caused more fatalities since 1900 than all the great interplate thrust events.