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Editor's Highlight
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GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH LETTERS,
VOL. 33,
L23308,
doi:10.1029/2006GL027250,
2006
Tectonic control of subsidence and southward displacement of southeast Louisiana with respect to stable North America
Roy K. Dokka
Center for GeoInformatics and Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering, Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge,
Louisiana, USA
Giovanni F. Sella
National Geodetic Survey, National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, Silver Spring, Maryland, USA
Timothy H. Dixon
Rosenstiel School of Marine and Atmospheric Science, University of Miami, Miami, Florida, USA
Abstract
GPS data collected between 1995 and 2006 suggest that southeast Louisiana, including New Orleans and the larger Mississippi
Delta, are both subsiding vertically and moving southward with respect to stable North America. Both motions are likely related
due to their common tectonic setting. Subsidence in the New Orleans area occurs in part because it is located in the hanging
wall of a large listric normal fault system that forms the northern boundary of a 7–10 km thick allochthon that is detached
from stable North America. Southward motion of this allochthon relative to stable North America occurs at 2.2 ± 0.6 mm/yr.
The average subsidence rate for GPS sites located on the allochthon is 5.2 ± 0.9 mm/yr relative to Earth's center of mass,
or ∼7 mm/yr relative to mean sea level. Motion of the allochthon is likely due to the gravity instability created by rapid
Holocene sediment deposition in the delta following continental glacial retreat and is facilitated at depth by weak salt horizons.
Because New Orleans and other communities of southeastern Louisiana lie atop this active allochthon, future motion of this
body should be considered during rebuilding of the region following Hurricanes Katrina and Rita.
Received 15
June
2006;
accepted 2
November
2006;
published 13
December
2006.
Keywords: tectonics;
faulting;
subsidence.
Index Terms: 8002 Structural Geology: Continental neotectonics (8107); 8011 Structural Geology: Kinematics of crustal and mantle deformation.
Read Full Article (file size: 271398 bytes) Cited by
Citation: Dokka, R. K., G. F. Sella, and T. H. Dixon
(2006),
Tectonic control of subsidence and southward displacement of southeast Louisiana with respect to stable North America,
Geophys. Res. Lett.,
33,
L23308,
doi:10.1029/2006GL027250.
Copyright 2006 by the American Geophysical Union.
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