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The geologic history of the Caribbean-Cocos plate boundary with special reference to the Nicoya ophiolite complex (Costa Rica) and D.S.D.P. results (Legs 67 and 84 off Guatemala): A synthesis
Authors:Jacques Bourgois  Jacques Azema  Peter O Baumgartner  Jean Tournon  Alain Desmet  Jean Aubouin
Abstract:The Pre-Upper Senonian basement of Costa Rica crops out in the Santa Elena and Nicoya peninsulas. From south to north and from base to top the basement includes: the Esperanza, Matapalo and Santa Elena units. The Esperanza unit is Albian-Santonian in age and consists mainly of pillow basalt and massive basalt flows. The Matapalo unit includes Callovian to Cenomanian radiolarite and includes massive basalt flows, basalt, and dolerite basement. The Santa Elena unit contains ultramafic and mafic rocks in which harzburgite is the major component. The most important tectonic features of the Nicoya Complex are the large Santa Elena and Matapalo nappes. Nappe emplacement was from north to south during upper Santonian time. The sedimentary cover of the Nicoya Complex comprises:
1. (1) the Campanian El Viejo Formation that consists of shallow-water sediments in the north (Santa Elena Peninsula) and the Campanian-Maastrichtian Sabana Grande Formation of deep-water origin in the South (Nicoya Peninsula);
2. (2) Paleocene strata indicating deposition in a deep-water environment comprises the Rivas, Las Palmas and Samara Formations;
3. (3) a post-upper Eocene (?) sequence that consists of the shallow-water Barra Honda and Montezuma Formations.
Two unconformities are significant geological features of the upper-Senonian to Tertiary history of Costa Rica. The lower one is at the base of the Sabana Grande Formation and marks a major change in the geologic conditions (basalt is scarce in the Campanian-Tertiary series); the upper unconformity at the base of the Barra Honda and Montezuma Formations is not as major as the lower one. During post-Campanian time, normal faulting occurred in two stages separated by a strong erosional phase.The geology of the landward slope of the adjacent Middle America Trench is outlined by interpreting multifold seismic reflection records off the west coast of Costa Rica and the DSDP Legs 67 and 84 transects off Guatemala. The western Caribbean plate boundary may have been under extensional stress for the last 75 m.y. The strong landward-dipping reflectors of the Middle America Trench landward slope off Guatemala could be equivalent to the on-land pre-Campanian overthrusts of Costa Rica. The available data are consistent with the Convergent Extensional margin concept.
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