Buesaco-Aranda Fault

The Buesaco-Aranda Fault (Spanish: Falla Buesaco-Aranda) is a dextral strike-slip fault in the department of Nariño in southwestern Colombia. The fault has a total length of 29 kilometres (18 mi) and runs along an average northeast to southwest strike in the Central Ranges of the Colombian Andes. The 1995 Pasto earthquake is associated with the active fault showing high amounts of displacement. The earthquake caused seven fatalities.

Buesaco-Aranda Fault
Falla Buesaco-Aranda
EtymologyBuesaco & vereda Aranda
Country Colombia
RegionAndean
StateNariño
CitiesPasto
Characteristics
RangeCentral Ranges, Andes
Part ofRomeral Fault System
Length29 km (18 mi)
StrikeNE-SW
DipVertical
Displacement1–5 mm (0.039–0.197 in)/yr
Tectonics
PlateNorth Andean
StatusActive
Earthquakes1995 Pasto (ML 5.0)
TypeStrike-slip fault
MovementDextral
AgeQuaternary
OrogenyAndean

Etymology

The fault is named after Buesaco and Aranda, a vereda of Pasto.[1] Other sources call the fault by the general name of Silvia-Pijao Fault.[2]

Description

The Buesaco-Aranda Fault, extends in a north-northeast to northeast direction from near the Galeras Volcano in southwestern Colombia. The Buesaco Fault is located 5 kilometres (3.1 mi) to the west of the Aranda Fault. On the eastern block of the Buesaco Fault, the basement rock consists of basic volcanic, andesite and dark sedimentary rocks which probably developed in a marginal basin environment during Early Cretaceous time. On the western block of the fault are a group of low-grade metamorphic rocks which consist of greenschist, amphibolite, quartzite and black schist, all of Paleozoic age. The area is mostly covered by a Pliocene blanket of pyroclastic rocks and calc-alkaline lavas, Quaternary lahar deposits and fluvio-glacial deposits.[1]

The Buesaco-Aranda Fault has a very well-defined fault trace, with strongly deformed landforms of Pleistocene-Holocene age, clear breaks in slope along eroded fault scarps, and fault scarps facing both to the southeast or the northwest, which is a characteristic of strike-slip faults. Systematic right lateral deflections of some stream gullies, river channels, and ridges are visible. Offset features in confined alluvial deposits and in recent alluvial fans have fresh scarp morphology. The net cumulative horizontal slip calculated is 188 ± 14 metres (617 ± 46 ft), with 160 ± 10 metres (525 ± 33 ft) of displacement in offset landforms along the Aranda Fault.[1] The Morasurco volcano is enclosed by the Buesaco and Aranda Fault segments.[3]

Activity

The last strong seismic event occurred on the Buesaco Fault near Pasto at 18:23 on March 4, 1995; the magnitude of the biggest shock was M 5.0.[4] Seven people died as a result of the earthquake and the aftershocks.[5]

gollark: which could possibly be cool.
gollark: In my `writing_ideas` notes which will probably never be written I have> The world is a simulation, and a very buggy one. You can phase through walls if you walk through them at just the right angle wearing certain colors of T-shirt. Why is the clothing tear resistance code tied into collision detection? Why does it care about color? Nobody knows; it's filled with bizarre legacy code. Occasionally someone finds a really exploitable issue, runs off to certain regions of the world to “test things”, and disappears. Perhaps they manage to escape into reality somehow. Perhaps they're somehow “hired” by the admins to patch further issues. Perhaps they're just deleted to preserve stability.
gollark: (*Ra*, *Off to be the Wizard*, *Wizard's Bane*, and I can't remember any more right now)
gollark: It just needs to be sufficiently unfathomable and complex that most people won't do it.
gollark: You don't really need much of an explanation for that without this, though?

See also

References

  1. Paris et al., 2000a, p.26
  2. Plancha 5-18, 2015
  3. Tibaldi & Romero, 2000, p.360
  4. (in Spanish) El sismo del 4 de marzo 1995, Pasto
  5. (in Spanish) Siete muertos dejaron cuatro sismos en Pasto - El Tiempo

Bibliography

Maps

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