Abstract

The northern Eastern Cordillera in the Colombian Andes is a wide (~200 km) high-elevation (>2.5 km) subduction-related asymmetric plateau. This plateau is currently subjected to shortening and magmatic addition, and yet the nature of the lowermost crust and its transition to the underlying mantle remains poorly constrained. To improve our knowledge about the structure of the deep crust beneath the EC plateau, we conducted a joint inversion of travel times of local earthquakes and gravity data. Gravity contributes to up to 0.5% in dVp and dVs with no affectation of the shape or location of the discussed anomalies. Along the latitudinal profile with the highest resolution (~5.7°N), two anomalies are identified at depths of 40–60 km beneath the plateau. A western low-velocity anomaly is interpreted as crustal material underthrust eastward beneath the northwestern EC. This process is triggering the abrupt change in topography between the adjacent low-elevation basin and the orogenic plateau. Additionally, a high-velocity anomaly beneath the eastern flank of the EC is likely related to mantle metasomatism and westward underthrusting of the foreland lithosphere. This metasomatism is either related to the interaction between mafic magmas and the uppermost mantle or silica enrichment that occurred during a past episode of flat subduction. Evidence for foreland underthrusting includes relocated earthquakes at 33–42 km depth within the thrust system between the EC and the foreland, along with increased shortening in the eastern part of the plateau, an increase in exhumation rates, the eastward migration of deformation towards the foreland, and dominated thick-skinned deformation in the upper crust of the foreland with an eastward vergence of thrusts and related folds. Furthermore, within the central part of the plateau, our results show low velocities between 30 and 40 km depth, consistent with previous constraints, suggesting magmatic underplating beneath the Paipa-Iza volcanic complex.

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