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Neotectonic mapping of Puerto Rico

September 13, 2024

Puerto Rico is part of the Puerto Rico-Virgin Islands microplate, along the Caribbean–North American plate boundary between the Puerto Rico trench subduction zone and the Muertos Trough incipient subduction zone. Despite recent seismicity and geodetically constrained deformation of ~3 mm/yr of left-lateral shear across the island, Quaternary fault locations remain largely uncertain. Preservation of recent faulting in the landscape is masked by distributed faulting, high weathering rates of the tropical climate, steep topography, frequent landsliding, and extensive agriculture and urbanization along coastlines and river valleys. We present remote neotectonic mapping of historical aerial imagery from the 1930s-60s and <1-m lidar topography, integrated with field observations, to create an updated active fault map of Puerto Rico. We focus on faults that offset younger geomorphic surfaces, with ages estimated by geologic mapping, OSL and radiocarbon dating, and morphologic interpretations. We present new evidence for Quaternary activity on seven faults, including the South Lajas, Salinas, Punta Montalva, Great Southern Puerto Rico, Cerro Goden, Parguera, and San Marcos faults. We find that active faulting occurs preferentially along the southern and western coasts and does not always spatially coincide with preexisting bedrock faults, possibly reflecting partial reactivation of older faults in the modern strain field.

Publication Year 2024
Title Neotectonic mapping of Puerto Rico
DOI 10.26443/seismica.v3i1.1102
Authors Jessica Jobe, Richard Briggs, K. Hughes, J. Joyce, Ryan Gold, Shannon Mahan, Harrison J. Gray, Laura Strickland
Publication Type Article
Publication Subtype Journal Article
Series Title Seismica
Index ID 70269047
Record Source USGS Publications Warehouse
USGS Organization Geologic Hazards Science Center - Landslides / Earthquake Geology
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