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Deep brittle-ductile transition, water percolation into the mantle and reactivation of weakness zone: new insights of the seismicity on St. Paul Transform System, Equatorial Atlantic
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  • Guilherme de Melo,
  • Aderson do Nascimento,
  • Marcia Maia,
  • Julie Perrot,
  • Alexey Sukhovich,
  • Jean-Yves Royer,
  • Thomas Campos
Guilherme de Melo
UFRN

Corresponding Author:gdemelo@geomar.de

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Aderson do Nascimento
UFRN
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Marcia Maia
CNRS
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Julie Perrot
CNRS
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Alexey Sukhovich
CNRS
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Jean-Yves Royer
CNRS
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Thomas Campos
UFRN
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Abstract

Four transform faults and three intra-transform segments located at Equatorial Atlantic form the Saint Paul Transform System (SPTS), with a long-offset of 630 km. In the northern transform, the 200 km long and 30 km wide Atoba Ridge is a major topographic feature that reaches the sea level at the St. Peter and St. Paul Archipelago island (SPSPA, 00º 55 ‘0’ ‘N and 29º 20 ”43”W). The islets have an average uplift rate of approximately 1.5 mm/year. The southern and northern flanks of the Atobá Ridge are marked by a series of large thrust faults visible in the bathymetry and clearly imaged through seismics and correspond to an exceptionally serpentinized mantle. We have determined the hypocentral location of 62 minor-moderate earthquakes of SPTS, with magnitudes 1.9 ≥ M ≤ 5.3. The earthquakes occurred in 2013 and were recorded by a seismometer installed in SPSPA and three autonomous hydrophones deployed during the COLMEIA cruise. The HYPOCENTER software and Seismic Analysis Code (SAC) were used for data analysis and hypocenter location. The depth range is from 0.2 to 17.5 km and are concentrated in three different zones: the East Shear Zone (ESZ), the Atobá Ridge Zone (ARZ) and the Central Fracture Zone (CFZ). A seismogenic zone with a deep britle-ductile transition was identified in SPTS, with hypocenters reaching 18 km beneath the seafloor. We observed that this lithospheric structure presents relation with the offset age and controls the maximum hypocentral depths of oceanic transform faults. Besides, the earthquakes indicated the existence of a broad serpentinization depth reaching 18 km beneath the ARZ. This was interpreted as the effect of deep water percolation into the mantle in the SPTS, which caused a fluid-mantelic rocks interaction and allowed the expansion of faults into the mantle. Some hypocenters were located in the central fracture zone (CFZ) segment of SPTS and their depths reached 8.8 km beneath the seafloor. We interpreted this seismicity as reactivation of a weakness zone existent in CFZ due to the transpressive load-induced stress originated in Atobá Ridge.