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Strike-slip Enables Subduction Initiation beneath a Failed Rift: New Seismic Constraints from Puysegur Margin, New Zealand
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  • Brandon Shuck,
  • Harm J.A. Van Avendonk,
  • Sean P. S. Gulick,
  • Michael Gurnis,
  • Rupert Sutherland,
  • Joann M. Stock,
  • Jiten Patel,
  • Erin Hightower,
  • Steffen Saustrup,
  • Thomas Hess
Brandon Shuck
Institute for Geophysics, Jackson School of Geosciences, University of Texas at Austin

Corresponding Author:[email protected]

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Harm J.A. Van Avendonk
Institute for Geophysics, Jackson School of Geosciences, University of Texas at Austin
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Sean P. S. Gulick
University of Texas at Austin
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Michael Gurnis
Californial Institute of Technology
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Rupert Sutherland
Victoria University of Wellington
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Joann M. Stock
California Institute of Technology
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Jiten Patel
Victoria University of Wellington
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Erin Hightower
Caltech
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Steffen Saustrup
University of Texas at Austin
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Thomas Hess
University of Texas at Austin
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Abstract

Subduction initiation often takes advantage of previously weakened lithosphere and may preferentially nucleate along pre-existing plate boundaries. To evaluate how past tectonic regimes and inherited lithospheric structure might lead to self-sustaining subduction, we present an analysis of the Puysegur Trench, a young subduction zone with a rapidly evolving tectonic history. The Puysegur margin, south of New Zealand, has experienced a transformation from rifting to seafloor spreading to strike-slip, and most recently to incipient subduction, all in the last ~45 million years. Here we present deep-penetrating multichannel reflection (MCS) and ocean-bottom seismometer (OBS) tomographic images to document crustal structures along the margin. Our images reveal that the overriding Pacific Plate beneath the Solander Basin contains stretched continental crust with magmatic intrusions, which formed from Eocene-Oligocene rifting between the Campbell and Challenger plateaus. Rifting was more advanced to the south, yet never proceeded to breakup and seafloor spreading in the Solander Basin as previously thought. Subsequent strike-slip deformation translated continental crust northward causing an oblique collisional zone, with trailing ~10 Myr old oceanic lithosphere. Incipient subduction transpired as oceanic lithosphere from the south forcibly underthrust the continent-collision zone. We suggest that subduction initiation at the Puysegur Trench was assisted by inherited buoyancy contrasts and structural weaknesses that were imprinted into the lithosphere during earlier phases of continental rifting and strike-slip along the plate boundary. The Puysegur margin demonstrates that forced nucleation along a strike-slip boundary is a viable subduction initiation scenario and should be considered throughout Earth’s history.
May 2021Published in Tectonics volume 40 issue 5. 10.1029/2020TC006436