Abstract
New air gun reflection profiles, 3.5‐kHz reflection profiles, and microearthquake data recorded by an array of ocean bottom seismographs form the basis for this study of the transition from a spreading center to a major transform fault. Disturbances of the thick, normally flat‐lying, turbidite deposits provide indications of recent vertical motions. At the western intersection of the fracture zone with the median valley there is a depression in the sediments that represents the southerly extension of the median valley into the fracture zone valley. The depression is terminated abruptly on the south by the active transform fault, which acts as a locus for vertical as well as horizontal displacement. Flat‐lying, undisturbed sediments terminate abruptly at the fault. The western boundary of the depression is much broader and is characterized by a series of slumplike steps. To the west, there is little or no evidence for uplift or tilting of sediments which might indicate vertical recovery of the crust as it spreads away from the depression. This suggests that uplift and recovery out of the depression is episodic in nature and has been inactive over the last million years along the western boundary. To the east there is clear evidence of uplift and tilting of sedimentary layers. A basement ridge emerging from the sediments is currently being uplifted and rotated in a manner analogous to processes responsible for the creation and cancellation of median valley relief. The transition between the spreading center and the transform fault appears to take place within 1–2 km. The width of the transform fault just east of the depression is less than a kilometer. Microearthquakes were located and displayed by new methods that directly account for nonlinearities associated with small arrays. Microearthquakes located by three or more ocean bottom seismometers show that the greatest seismic activity occurs along the eastern walls of the median valley, at the basement ridge, in the eastern portion of the depression and in the crestal mountains. Very little activity is associated with the western edge of the transform depression and the trace of the transform fault.
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