Author:
DAY S. J.,CARRACEDO J. C.,GUILLOU H.
Abstract
The catastrophic slope failures and landslides that occur in the
final stages of lateral collapses of
volcanoes destroy much of the evidence for precursory deformation and the
early stages of the collapses
concerned. Aborted or incomplete collapse structures, although rare, are
rich sources of information on
these stages of development of catastrophic collapses. The San Andres
fault system, on the volcanic island
of El Hierro, is a relatively young (between about 545 and about
261–176 ka old) but inactive lateral
collapse structure. It appears to represent an aborted giant landslide.
It is developed along the flank of a
steep-sided volcanic rift zone, and is bounded by a discrete strike-slip
fault zone at the up-rift end, closest to
the centre of the island. This geometry differs markedly from that of
collapse structures on stratovolcanoes
but bears some similarities to that of active fault systems on Hawaii.
Although the fault system has undergone
little erosion, cataclasites which formed close to the palaeosurface
are well exposed. These cataclasites
are amongst the first fault rocks to be described from volcano lateral
collapse structures and include the
only pseudotachylytes to have been identified in such structures to
date. Their development at unusually
shallow depths is attributed to large movements on the fault in a
single event, the inferred aborted landslide,
and a lack of pressurized pore water. The absence of pressurized fluids
in the slumping block may have
caused the San Andres fault system to cease moving, rather than develop
into a giant volcanic landslide. The
recognition that the San Andres fault system is inactive greatly
reduces the estimated volcanic hazard associated
with El Hierro. However, the lack of evidence for precursory deformation
prior to the aborted landslide
event is disturbing as it implies that giant lateral collapses can
occur on steep-sided oceanic islands with little warning.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Cited by
59 articles.
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