IMAGES OF CONTINENTAL LITHOSPHERIC BENDING, TEARING, AND REBOUND IN THE SOUTHEASTERN CARIBBEAN PLATE BOUNDARY
The profiles document the evolution of the southeastern Caribbean plate boundary from west to east as South America has collided with and moved westward past the Caribbean plate from ~55 Ma to the present. This motion has forced a tear to develop in the South American plate between the subducting Atlantic oceanic lithosphere and buoyant continental South America. This plate boundary has been characterized as a Subduction-Transform Edge Propagator (STEP fault) by Govers and Wortel, 2005. Near the eastern edge of the plate boundary at the 64W profile, the South American continent is depressed ~15-20 km more than its reference state as the subducting Atlantic drags down the northern margin of South America, making space for a moderately shortened fold and thrust belt with ~65km shortening. The Moho shows abrupt changes in depth in traversing from the continental interior (at ~37km depth) to the plate boundary (~50km), across the island arc/metamorphic terranes in the near offshore region (~25km), to the Caribbean Large Igneous Province (~15km). A shear tear in the plate offshore at approximately (62.5o,W, 11.0o,N), is manifest by a column of mantle seismicity extending from ~50-110km depth. The western profiles (65, 67, and 70W) show a relaxing South American lithosphere and a shallowing Moho, resulting in uplift of the onshore and near offshore terranes, and exhuming both HP/LT subduction complex rocks and Paleogene basins. The systematic rebound of the South American continental lithosphere is responsible for significant aspects of the plate boundary tectonics.