Person:
Llanes Estrada, María Pilar

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First Name
María Pilar
Last Name
Llanes Estrada
Affiliation
Universidad Complutense de Madrid
Faculty / Institute
Ciencias Geológicas
Department
Geodinámica, Estratigrafía y Paleontología
Area
Geodinámica Interna
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UCM identifierScopus Author IDDialnet IDGoogle Scholar ID

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Now showing 1 - 10 of 18
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    Aplicación del sensor Kinect en modelos análogos para la identificación morfo-estructural de procesos de deformación en volcanes
    (Geogaceta, 2015) Rincón, Marta; Márquez González, Álvaro; van Wyk de Vries, Benjamín; Herrera, Raquel; Granja Bruña, José Luis; Llanes Estrada, María Pilar
    La morfología de los volcanes refleja los episodios de deformación sufridos por el edificio, aunque procesos de deformación diferentes pueden provocar morfologías similares. La modelización análoga es una herramienta clave para comprender mejor las causas de la deformación en volcanes a partir de su morfología. En este trabajo se ha utilizado por primera vez el sensor Kinect (Microsoft®) para monitorizar los cambios topográficos en volcanes sometidos a experimentos de deformación por procesos de intrusión y expansión sobre un núcleo hidrotermal. Los resultados obtenidos muestran diferencias entre ambos procesos en la amplitud y localización de las zonas de subsidencia y abombamiento del volcán, la altura del cambio de pendiente del flanco deformado y la intensidad de la fracturación. Los problemas técnicos detectados en los datos del Kinect limitan la cuantificación de esas diferencias mediante técnicas morfométricas e implican la necesidad de seguir explorando las capacidades de estos modelos para la identificación morfo-estructural de procesos de deformación en volcanes.
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    Nueva interpretación del relleno sedimentario de la Cuenca de San Pedro (Offshore de la República Dominicana) en base a nuevos datos sísmicos
    (Geotemas, 2016) Gorosabel Araus, J.M.; Granja Bruña, José Luis; Carbo Gorosabel, Andrés; Gómez de la Peña, Laura; Rodríguez Zurrunero, Álvaro; Muñoz Martín, Alfonso; Pazos, Antonio; Gómez Ballesteros, María; Druet Vélez, María; Llanes Estrada, María Pilar
    Los nuevos datos de sísmica de reflexión multicanal 2D adquiridos en la Cuenca de San Pedro (margen sudeste de la República Dominicana), junto con antiguos perfiles sísmicos reprocesados, han permitido llevar a cabo un detallado análisis y revisión de la estratigrafía sísmica. Los nuevos datos sísmicos aportan nuevas precisiones sobre la evolución de la cuenca sugiriendo un origen de al menos Eoceno Superior, en lugar de Mioceno. La nueva interpretación se basa en la correlación onshore-offshore de un nivel guía de abanicos bien desarrollado, con los eventos tectónicos constreñidos tierra y asociados a la colisión con los Bancos de las Bahamas con el arco isla el Eoceno Medio.
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    Margen Continental Gallego; Zona Económica Exclusiva Española (ZEEE): mapas temáticos de anomalías gravimétricas de aire libre y Bouguer (2012)
    (2012) Martín Dávila, José; Catalán, Manuel; Larran, M.; Somoza, Luis; León, R.; Gonzalez, F.J.; Carbo Gorosabel, Andrés; Muñoz Martín, Alfonso; Granja, J.L.; Llanes Estrada, María Pilar; Gómez Ballesteros, María; Druet Vélez, María; Acosta, Juan
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    Morphostructure at the junction between the Beata ridge and the Greater Antilles island arc (offshore Hispaniola southern slope)
    (Tectonophysics, 2014) Granja Bruña, José Luis; Carbo Gorosabel, Andrés; Llanes Estrada, María Pilar; Muñoz Martín, Alfonso
    Oblique convergence between the Caribbean plate's interior and the inactive Greater Antilles island arc has resultedin the collision and impingement of the thickened crust of theBeata ridge into southern Hispaniola Island. Deformation resulting from this convergence changes from a low-angle southward-verging thrust south of easternHispaniola, to collision and uplift in south-central Hispaniola, and to left-lateral transpression along theSouthern peninsula of Haiti in western Hispaniola. Using new swath bathymetry and a dense seismic reflectiongrid, we mapped the morphological, structural and sedimentological Elements of offshore southern Hispaniola.We have identified four morphotectonic provinces: the Dominican sub-basin, the Muertos margin, the Beataridge and the Haiti sub-basin. The lower slope of the Muertos margin is occupied by the active Muertos thrustbelt, which includes several active out-of-sequence thrust faults that, were they to rupture along their entirelength, could generate large-magnitude earthquakes. The interaction of the thrust beltwith the Beata ridge yieldsa huge recess and the imbricate system disappears. The upper slope of the Muertos margin shows hick slopedepositswhere the extensional tectonics and slumping processes predominate. The northern Beata ridge consistsof an asymmetrically uplifted and faulted block of oceanic crust. Our results suggest that the shallower structureand morphology of the northern Beata ridge can be mainly explained by a mechanism of extensional unloadingfrom the Upper Cretaceous onward that is still active residually along the summit of the ridge. The tectonicmodels for the northern Beata ridge involving active reverse strike–slip faults and transpression caused by theoblique convergence between the Beata ridge and the island arc are not supported by the structural interpretation.The eastern Bahoruco slope an old normal fault that acts as a passive tear fault accommodating the sharpalong-strike transition from low-angle thrusting to collision and uplifting.
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    Cartografía de dominios litosféricos y estilo de deformación en el margen continental de Galicia (margen noroeste de la Península Ibérica)
    (Geotemas, 2016) Druet Vélez, María; Muñoz Martín, Alfonso; Granja Bruña, José Luis; Carbo Gorosabel, Andrés; Acosta, Juan; Llanes Estrada, María Pilar; Ercilla, Gemma
    El margen continental de Galicia presenta una estructura muy compleja, debido a dos efectos principales. Por un lado, se trata de un margen de rift pobre en magma, generado en las proximidades del punto triple R-R-R que dio lugar a la apertura simultánea del Océano Atlántico y el golfo de Vizcaya durante el Cretácico. Por otra parte, el régimen de esfuerzos compresivo Cenozoico generó la inversión parcial del margen continental hacia el norte y el noroeste, aportando una mayor complejidad estructural. En este trabajo hemos realizado un análisis detallado de la nueva información gravimétrica y batimétrica obtenida durante las campañas del Proyecto ZEE, así como de nuevos perfiles de sísmica de reflexión multicanal procedentes del Proyecto ERGAP. Presentamos aquí parte de los resultados de este análisis conjunto de toda la información geofísica y geológica disponible, consistentes en una cartografía continua de los diferentes dominios litosféricos y del tipo de deformación que los afectan, desde el margen oeste de la Península Ibérica hasta el margen norte.
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    Submarine landslide deposits of the historical lateral collapse of Ritter Island, Papua New Guinea
    (Marine and Petroleum Geology, 2015) Day, Simon; Llanes Estrada, María Pilar; Silver, Eli; Hoffmann, Gary; Ward, Steve; Driscol, Neal
    The March 13th 1888 collapse of Ritter Island in Papua New Guinea is the largest known sector collapse of an island volcano in historical times. One single event removed most of the island and its western submarine flank, and produced a landslide deposit that extends at least 70 km from the headwall of the collapse scar. We have mapped and described the deposits of the debris avalanche left by the collapse using full-coverage multibeam bathymetry, side-scan sonar backscatter intensity mapping, chirp seismic-reflection profiles, TowCam photographs of the seafloor and samples from a single dredge. Applying concepts originally developed on the 1980 Mount St. Helens collapse landslide deposits, we find that the Ritter landslide deposits show three distinct morphological facies: large block debris avalanche, matrix-rich debris avalanche and distal debris flow facies. Restoring the island's land and submarine topography we obtained a volume of 4.2 km3 for the initial collapse, about 75% of which is now forming the large block facies at distances less than 12 km from the collapse scar. The matrix-rich facies volume is unknown, but large scale erosion of the marine sediment substrate yielded a minimum total volume of 6.4 km3 in the distal debris flow and/or turbidite deposits, highlighting the efficiency of substrate erosion during the later history of the landslide movement. Although studying submarine landslide deposits we can never have the same confidence that subaerial observations provide, our analysis shows that well-exposed submarine landslide deposits can be interpreted in a similar way to subaerial volcano collapse deposits, and that they can in turn be used to interpret older, incompletely exposed submarine landslide deposits. Studying the deposits from a facies perspective provides the basis for reconstructing the kinematics of a collapse event landslide; understanding the mechanisms involved in its movement and deposition; and so providing key inputs to tsunami models.
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    El terremoto de Haití
    (Enseñanza de las ciencias de la tierra, 2011) Granja Bruña, José Luis; Carbo Gorosabel, Andrés; Hernáiz-Huerta, Pedro Pablo; Llanes Estrada, María Pilar; Muñoz Martín, Alfonso; Olaiz Campos, Antonio José
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    Gravity modeling of the Muertos Trough and tectonic implications (north-eastern Caribbean)
    (Marine Geophysical researches, 2010) Granja Bruña, José Luis; Muñoz Martín, Alfonso; Ten Brink, Uri S.; Carbo Gorosabel, Andrés; Llanes Estrada, María Pilar; Martín Dávila, José; Córdoba Barba, Diego; Catalán, Manuel
    The Muertos Trough in the northeast Caribbean has been interpreted as a subduction zone from seismicity, leading to infer a possible reversal subduction polarity. However, the distribution of the seismicity is very diffuse and makes definition of the plate geometry difficult. In addition, the compressive deformational features observed in the upper crust and sandbox kinematic modeling do not necessarily suggest a subduction process. We tested the hypothesized subduction of the Caribbean plate’s interior beneath the eastern Greater Antilles island arc using gravity modeling. Gravity models simulating a subduction process yield a regional mass deficit beneath the island arc independently of the geometry and depth of the subducted slab used in the models. This mass deficit results from sinking of the less dense Caribbean slab beneath the lithospheric mantle replacing denser mantle materials and suggests that there is not a subducted Caribbean plateau beneath the island arc. The geologically more realistic gravity model which would explain the N–S shortening observed in the upper crust requires an overthrusted Caribbean slab extending at least 60 km northward from the deformation front, a progressive increase in the thrusting angle from 8 to 30 reaching a maximum depth of 22 km beneath the insular slope. This new tectonic model for the Muertos Margin, defined as a retroarc thrusting, will help to assess the seismic and tsunami hazard in the region. The use of gravity modeling has provided targets for future wide-angle seismic surveys in the Muertos Margin.
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    Crustal structure and continent?ocean boundary along the Galicia continental margin (NW Iberia): insights from combined gravity and seismic interpretation
    (Tectonics, 2018) Druet Vélez, María; Muñoz Martín, Alfonso; Granja Bruña, José Luis; Carbo Gorosabel, Andrés; Acosta, Juan; Llanes Estrada, María Pilar; Ercilla, Gemma
    The magma?poor rifted continental margin of Galicia has an extremely complex structure. Its formation involved several rifting episodes that occurred ultimately during the early Cretaceous near a ridge triple junction, which produced a change in the orientation of the main structures in its transition to the north Iberia margin. In addition, there is a superimposed partial tectonic inversion along its northwest and northern border which developed from the Late Cretaceous to at least Oligocene times. The present study integrates a large volume of new geophysical information (mainly marine gravity data and 2D seismic reflection profiles) to provide insights on the formation of this rift system and on the development of its later inversion. The combined interpretation and modeling of this data enable the presentation of a new crustal and structural domains map for the whole Galicia margin. This includes the rift domains related to the extreme thinning of the crust and the lithospheric mantle (stretched, necking, and hyperextension and mantle exhumation (HME) domains), as well as a domain of intense compressional deformation. New constraints arise on the origin, the deep structure, and the characterization of the along? and across?strike variation of the continent?ocean transition of the margin, where a progressive change from hyperextension to partial inversion is observed. The development of both rifting and later partial tectonic inversion is influenced by the existence of former first?order tectonic features. Most of the tectonic inversion is focused on the HME domain, which in some areas of the northwestern margin is completely overprinted by compressional deformation.
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    New Survey Explores the Northern Hispaniola Offshore Margin
    (2015) Carbo Gorosabel, Andrés; Granja Bruña, José Luis; Rodríguez Zurrunero, Álvaro; Muñoz Martín, Alfonso; Gorosabel Araus, J.M.; Llanes Estrada, María Pilar; Druet Vélez, María
    The highly oblique convergence between the North American and Caribbean plates has yielded that the thickened crust of Bahamas banks impinges into northern Hispaniola developing a narrow band of compressive deformation (northern Hispaniola margin) and a thick foreland basin (Hispaniola-Caicos basin). Approximately 280 km of 2D MCS profiles and 17000 km2 of high-resolution, systematic swath bathymetry data were recorded in the northern Hispaniola offshore margin in November-December of 2013 (NORCARIBE cruise). This is the first time that this region is explored systematically with highresolution multibeam bathymetry. Using new multibeam bathymetry and MCS data, combined we have studied the along- and across-strike variations of the shallower structure along a 330 km-long segment of the northern Hispaniola margin. Pronounced along-strike changes in structural style observed in the northern Hispaniola margin and Hispaniola-Caicos basin are associated with the active oblique underthrusting/indentation of the irregular boundary of the southernmost slope of the Mouchouir and Silver banks. The upper slope of the northern Hispaniola margin exhibits good economic potential associated to thick slope basins and terraces where is observable a continuous and prominent BSR. Preliminary results provide well- defined targets to carry out future exploration studies.