Gravity Anomalies of Costa Rica and their Relations to Crustal Structure and Mineralization
    
    - Organization:
 - The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
 - Pages:
 - 4
 - File Size:
 - 595 KB
 - Publication Date:
 - Jan 1, 1987
 
Abstract
Complete Bouguer and isostatic anomaly  maps compiled for Costa Rica provide new  insights into the crustal structure and  mineralization. Terrain corrections were  approximated from the station to a radial  distance of 167 km by computer using a 3- minute digital elevation model of Costa Rica  and surrounding areas. Isostatic corrections,  based on Airy-Heiskanen compensation, were  also calculated from 0 to 167 km using the 3- minute elevation model and from 167 km to 180  degrees using combined topographic and  isostatic reduction maps. Costa Rica can be divided into four main  terranes based on gravity data: a Pacific  coastal region, a Pacific inland area, a  central region, and a Caribbean coastal  region. Negative gravity anomalies along the  Pacific coastal margin correlate with an  offshore sedimentary basin, and large positive  anomalies correlate with mafic and ultramafic  igneous rocks on the Santa Elena, Nicoya, and  Osa Peninsulas, and at Puerto Quepos. Pacific  inland anomalies are separated from the  Pacific coastal region by a steep gravity  gradient, and over the Coast Ranges a major  gravity low overlies a thick section of low- density sedimentary rocks. In the central  region, a major gravity low occurs over a  thick low-density Quaternary volcanic complex  in the Cordillera Central, north of San  Jose. A prominent feature of the Caribbean  coastal region is an interrupted gravity low  over the Limon Basin that reflects a  thickening of low-density sedimentary rocks. A conspicuous gravity lineament, trending  northeast separates northern and southern  Costa Rica. The lineament is defined by the  termination of several major gravity anomalies  including those over the Coast Ranges,  Cordillera Central, Puerto Quepos, and Limon  Basin. In addition, the lineament correlates  with other geological and geophysical data  including: northeast-trending faults, the  southern limit of large Quaternary volcanoes,  the segmentation of the middle America volcanic belt, and a seismicity gap. This  lineament may be the expression of a  previously unrecognized major northeast- trending fracture zone in central Costa  Rica. An important economic implication of  the gravity lineament is a correlation with  the termination of gold and porphyry copper  deposits in Costa Rica.
Citation
APA: (1987) Gravity Anomalies of Costa Rica and their Relations to Crustal Structure and Mineralization
MLA: Gravity Anomalies of Costa Rica and their Relations to Crustal Structure and Mineralization. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 1987.