Home Page Society Home Page Contact Us Frequently Asked Questions Site Search Site Map GSA Bookstore Online Journals Join GSA Donate Now!

Geology

Article: pp. 353–356 | Full Text | PDF (306K)

Does Kamchatka belong to North America? An extruding Okhotsk block suggested by coastal neotectonics of the Ozernoi Peninsula, Kamchatka, Russia

Kevin Pedoja1, Joanne Bourgeois2, Tatiana Pinegina3, and Bretwood Higman4

1. Key Laboratory of Marginal Sea Geology, South China Sea Institute of Oceanology, and Guangzhou Institute of Geochemistry, China Academy of Sciences, Guangzhou, PR China, 2. Department of Earth and Space Sciences, University of Washington, Seattle, WA 98195, USA, 3. Institute of Volcanology and Seismology, FED, Petropavlovsk-Kamchatskiy, 683006, Russia, 4. Department of Earth and Space Sciences, University of Washington, Seattle, WA 98195, USA

This paper addresses one part of an outstanding tectonic problem regarding the nature of the plate boundary between Eurasia and North America in northeastern Russia. In this region, the northwestern corner of the Pacific plate interacts either simply with the North American plate, or more complexly with one or more blocks independent of North America. North of this corner, evidence of uplift, tilting, and convergence contradicts the prevailing, simpler model. On the Ozernoi Peninsula, ∼150 km north of the subducting Pacific plate, marine terraces indicate uplift rates of 0.1 to 0.3 mm/yr, with faster rates to the east. Historic and paleoseismic records provide evidence for recurring tsunamigenic, thrust earthquakes offshore of the Ozernoi Peninsula, the most recent a Mw 7.7 earthquake in 1969. A multiplate model where an eastward-moving Okhotsk block, including most of Kamchatka, is converging with a clockwise-rotating Bering block better explains these observations than does the unbroken North American plate model.

Keywords: Kamchatka, Quaternary marine terraces, neotectonics, plate tectonics, Okhotsk, Bering Sea

Received: 14 July 2005; Revised: 1 December 2005; Accepted: 11 December 2005

DOI: 10.1130/G22062.1

top

GSA HomeBookstoreAbout GSAContact UsFAQs

© 2007 Geological Society of America Tel: (303) 357-1000. E-mail: gsaservice@geosociety.org.