Person:
Muñoz Martín, Alfonso

Loading...
Profile Picture
First Name
Alfonso
Last Name
Muñoz Martín
Affiliation
Universidad Complutense de Madrid
Faculty / Institute
Ciencias Geológicas
Department
Geodinámica, Estratigrafía y Paleontología
Area
Geodinámica Interna
Identifiers
UCM identifierORCIDScopus Author IDWeb of Science ResearcherIDDialnet IDGoogle Scholar ID

Search Results

Now showing 1 - 10 of 15
  • Item
    Análisis de los esfuerzos tectónicos de la crisis sísmica de 2010 en Haití
    (Geogaceta, 2014) López Cuesta, Víctor; Muñoz Martín, Alfonso; Granja Bruña, José Luis
    El evento de Mw=7 del 12 de enero 2010 provocó una crisis sísmica en el sur de Haití, que duró 3 meses. Se ha realizado un análisis de inversión de esfuerzos de los mecanismos focales del evento principal y 50 réplicas. El evento principal fue generado por un falla de buzamiento 64ºN y dirección N084Eº con una componente principal de deslizamiento lateral-izquierda y una componente inversa. Las réplicas se han generado por fallas inversas puras ENE-OSO situadas en la zona de interacción entre estructuras compresivas orientadas NO-SE y de desgarre orientadas E-O. Estas réplicas han sido activadas por un régimen de esfuerzos compresivo uniaxial muy homogéneo orientado con σ1 horizontal según N017ºE ±10º. La ausencia de ruptura en superficie indica que el origen de las réplicas son fallas ciegas orientadas N097º-117ºE. Los datos de deformación superficial intersísmica obtenidos a partir de velocidades derivadas de GPS para la zona epicentral muestran una desviación angular de ≈30º respecto a la orientación de σ1 obtenidos del análisis de esfuerzos. Esta desviación sugiere que una parte significativa de la energía elástica acumulada a lo largo de las estructuras de tendencia E-O no fue liberada durante la crisis sísmica de 2010.
  • Item
    Análisis de Mapas de Anomalías Gravimétricas en el Borde NE de la Placa Caribe
    (2006) Granja Bruña, José Luis; Carbo Gorosabel, Andrés; Muñoz Martín, Alfonso
    Along the Eastern Greater Antilles (Hispaniola and Puerto Rico area) takes place the interaction between the Caribbean and North-American plates. This interaction produced inside a broad band of deformation with a complex and active tectonics. Here, many tectonic models have been proposed: strain partitioning, microplates tectonics, oblique subduction, opposing subducted slabs, crust arching, and tear fault in the downgoing plate. Except the seismological data that provide a general idea about the disposition of the lithospherics plates in depth, the most of models has been proposed from geodetic data (GPS), geological surface data (onland and onsea) and refection seismic data, so the models are constrained only in the superficial crust. In this survey, an analysis of anomaly gravity maps is presented. Those maps have been realized from the gravity data acquired during the PRICO (1997) and GEOPRICO-DO (2005) marine geophysical surveys, on-land data and satellite gravity data. In the maps analysis we emphasize the extreme values of Bouguer gravity anomaly (-400 mGals) located in the oceanic crust of the North American plate and the maximum free air gravity anomaly of the Earth (-350 mGals) located in the Puerto Rico Trench. This analysis, integrated with geomagnetic, seismologic and deep seismic sounding data is the way to approach the study of deep crust and to can elaborate lithosphere models constrained in depth.
  • Item
    Cinturón Deformado de Los Muertos (Noreste de la Placa Caribe): Análisis Morfotectónico y Procesos Activos.
    (2006) Granja Bruña, José Luis; Carbo Gorosabel, Andrés; Muñoz Martín, Alfonso; Gómez Ballesteros, María
    The Muertos Deformed Belt (MDB) is a tectonic feature located within the Northeastern Caribbean Plate Boundary Zone. This deformed belt is occupying a broad band of active compression regime with an east-west trend along the south of Hispaniola and Puerto Rico islands. In our survey area, the deformed belt is limited to the south by the Muertos Trough (>5500 m depth), where the Venezuelan Basin oceanic crust is being underthrusted beneath western Puerto Rico and eastern Hispaniola areas. Here, we present the morphotectonic interpretation from the multibeam systematic survey in Muertos Deformed Belt area (from GEOPRICO-DO marine geophysical survey (2005)) and the relationship with seismicity and kinematic data (GPS). Active deformation features have been widely found in the area from bathymetry model and Chirp sub-bottom seismic profiles (TOPAS). These features include: folded and faulted recent sediments (Holocene), submarine landslides scars associated with faults (tsunamogenic potential) and submarine canyons deflected by fault traces. All these features are well preserved and show a little erosion. Future works will integrate potential field data and deep seismic data, which will allow us to elaborate complete tectonic models for this active and complex plate boundary.
  • Item
    Morphotectonics of the central Muertos thrust belt and Muertos Trough (northeastern Caribbean)
    (Marine Geology, 2009) Granja Bruña, José Luis; Ten Brink, Uri S.; Carbo Gorosabel, Andrés; Muñoz Martín, Alfonso; Gómez Ballesteros, María
    Multibeam bathymetry data acquired during the 2005 Spanish R/V Hespérides cruise and reprocessed multichannel seismic profiles provide the basis for the analysis of the morphology and deformation in the central Muertos Trough and Muertos thrust belt. The Muertos Trough is an elongated basin developed where the Venezuelan Basin crust is thrusted under the Muertos fold-and-thrust belt. Structural variations along the Muertos Trough are suggested to be a consequence of the overburden of the asymmetrical thrust belt and by the variable nature of the Venezuelan Basin crust along the margin. The insular slope can be divided into three east–west trending slope provinces with high lateral variability which correspond to different accretion stages: 1) The lower slope is composed of an active sequence of imbricate thrust slices and closed fold axes, which form short and narrow accretionary ridges and elongated slope basins; 2) The middle slope shows a less active imbricate structure resulting in lower superficial deformation and bigger slope basins; 3) The upper slope comprises the talus region and extended terraces burying an island arc basement and an inactive imbricate structure. The talus region is characterized by a dense drainage network that transports turbidite flows from the islands and their surrounding carbonate platform areas to the slope basins and sometimes to the trough. In the survey area the accommodation of the ongoing east–west differential motion between the Hispaniola and the Puerto Rico–Virgin Islands blocks takes place by means of diffuse deformation. The asymmetrical development of the thrust belt is not related to the geological conditions in the foreland, but rather may be caused by variations in the geometry and movement of the backstop. The map-view curves of the thrust belt and the symmetry of the recesses suggest a main north–south convergence along the Muertos margin. The western end of the Investigator Fault Zone comprises a broad band of active normal faults which result in high instability of the upper insular slope.
  • Item
    Zona económica exclusiva española (ZEEE): Mar Balear y Golfo de Valencia. Mapas generales de batimetría, geomorfología, anomalías geomagnéticas, gravimétricas de arie libre y de Bouguer
    (2015) Martín Dávila, José; Catalán Morollón, Manuel; Larrán, ALFONSO; Carbo Gorosabel, Andrés; Muñoz Martín, Alfonso; Granja Bruña, José Luis; Gómez Ballesteros, M.P.; Acosta Yepes, Juan; Tello, O.; Maestro, Adolfo; LLavé, E.
  • Item
    Survey explores active tectonics in Northeastern Caribbean
    (Eos, Transactions American Geophysical Union, 2005) Carbo Gorosabel, Andrés; Córdoba Barba, Diego; Martín Dávila, José; Ten Brink, Uri S.; Herranz Araújo, Pedro; Von Hilldebrant, Christa; Payero, Juan; Muñoz Martín, Alfonso; Pazos, Antonio; Catalán, Manuel; Granja Bruña, José Luis; Gómez Ballesteros, María
    There is renewed interest in studying the active and complex northeastern Caribbean plate boundary to better understand subduction zone processes and for earthquake and tsunami hazard assessments [e.g., ten Brink and Lin, 2004; ten Brink et al., 2004; Grindlay et al, 2005]. To study the active tectonics of this plate boundary, the GEOPRICO-DO (Geological, Puerto Rico-Dominican) marine geophysical cruise, carried out between 28 March and 17 April 2005 (Figure 1), studied the active tectonics of this plate boundary. Initial findings from the cruise have revealed a large underwater landslide, and active faults on the seafloor (Figures 2a and 2c). These findings indicate that the islands within this region face a high risk from tsunami hazards, and that local governments should be alerted in order to develop and coordinate possible mitigation strategies. The cruise collected multibeam bathymetry, gravity, magnetic, high-resolution seismic, deep seismic sounding, and multichannel seismic reflection data, which are currently being processed and interpreted (Table 1). In early November 2005, 10 ocean-bottom seismometers (OBS) that had been deployed northeast of Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands (Figure 1) during the cruise were recovered. These OBS recorded data during the cruise and the local seismicity between April and October 2005.
  • Item
    Segmentation and kinematics of the North America-Caribbean plate boundary offshore Hispaniola
    (Terra Nova, 2015) Leroy, Sylvie; Ellouz-Zimmermann, N.; Corbeau, J.; Rolandone, F.; Mercier de Lépinay, B.; Meyer, B.; Momplaisir, R.; Granja Bruña, José Luis; Battani, A.; Baurion, C.; Burov, E.; Clouard, V.; Deschamps, R.; Gorini, C.; Hamon, Y.; Lafosse, M.; Leonel, J.; Le Pourhiet, L.; Llanes Estrada, María Pilar; Loget, N.; Lucazeau, F.; Pillot, D.; Poort, J.; Tankoo, K.R.; Cuevas, J.L.; Alcaide, J.F.; Poix, C.J.; Muñoz Martín, Alfonso; Mitton, S.; Rodriguez, Y.; Schmitz, J.; Seeber, L.; Carbo Gorosabel, Andrés; Muñoz, S.
    We explored the submarine portions of the Enriquillo–Plantain Garden Fault zone (EPGFZ) and the Septentrional–Oriente Fault zone (SOFZ) along the Northern Caribbean plate boundary using high-resolution multibeam echo-sounding and shallow seismic reflection. The bathymetric data shed light on poorly documented or previously unknown submarine fault zones running over 200 km between Haiti and Jamaica (EPGFZ) and 300 km between the Dominican Republic and Cuba (SOFZ). The primary plate-boundary structures are a series of strike-slip fault segments associated with pressure ridges, restraining bends, step overs and dogleg offsets indicating very active tectonics. Several distinct segments 50–100 km long cut across pre-existing structures inherited from former tectonic regimes or bypass recent morphologies formed under the current strike-slip regime. Along the most recent trace of the SOFZ, we measured a strike-slip offset of 16.5 km, which indicates steady activity for the past ~1.8 Ma if its current GPS-derived motion of 9.8 ± 2 mm a−1 has remained stable during the entire Quaternary.
  • Item
    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.
  • Item
    Shallower structure and geomorphology of the southern Puerto Rico offshore margin
    (Marine and Petroleum Geology, 2015) Granja Bruña, José Luis; Ten Brink, Uri S.; Muñoz Martín, Alfonso; Carbo Gorosabel, Andrés; Llanes Estrada, María Pilar
    Oblique convergence between the North American and Caribbean plates along the eastern Greater Antilles island arc has yielded the asymmetric Muertos thrust belt in the backarc region. Offshore south of Puerto Rico, this thrust belt disappears and is replaced by a succession of NEeSW- and EeW-trending deep basins and steep ridges that characterize the western Anegada passage, resulting in a complex deformation pattern. Using new high-resolution multibeam bathymetry and seismic reflection profiles, we studied the geomorphology and shallower structure of the southern Puerto Rico offshore margin. We have identified four morphotectonic provinces: the Puerto Rican sub-basin and Muertos trough, the Muertos margin, the insular shelf and the western Anegada passage. The Muertos margin province shows two distinct slope sub-provinces: the active Muertos thrust belt e which includes lower and upper thrust belts with distinct deformational styles and lateral continuity e and the shelf slope highly-incised by a dense canyon network. This network is disrupted by the Investigator fault zone consisting of a 130 km-long EeW-trending band of active extensional deformation. The Investigator fault zone shows differential surface expression caused by along-strike changes in the magnitude and distribution of the deformation, though this deformation is driven by a NeS-oriented extension. In the western Anegada passage province, the Whiting basin and Whiting and Grappler ridges are formed by large dip-slip normal faults driven by a NWeSE-oriented extensional regime. The western St. Croix rise shows a complex structure where the NEeSW-trending NW-dipping normal faults observed at the summit of the rise predate the EeW-bounding faults that could accommodate the extensional deformation at the Present. This study provides detailed observations on the active tectonic and sedimentary processes to help future studies assessing the natural resources and the seismic and tsunamigenic hazard in the Puerto Rico region.
  • Item
    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