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Dive into the research topics where Guillermo E. Alvarado is active.

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Featured researches published by Guillermo E. Alvarado.


Geophysical Research Letters | 2001

Study of seismic site effects using H/V spectral ratios at Arenal Volcano, Costa Rica

Mauricio M. Mora; Philippe Lesage; Jacques Dorel; Pierre-Yves Bard; Jean-Philippe Métaxian; Guillermo E. Alvarado; Carlos Leandro

By using data obtained with a linear array at Arenal volcano, we show that the H/V spectral ratio method can be profitably applied to detect site effects on volcanoes. Similar results are obtained when calculating spectral ratios with different types of seismo-volcanic signals (tremor, ambient noise, explosion quakes, LP events). We compare the H/V ratios with theoretical S-wave transfer functions calculated using velocity models obtained from seismic refraction studies. There is a good agreement when the H/V ratios display sharp peaks, indicating a close relationship between the ratios and the transfer function of the shallow structure. Furthermore, the main peaks of the spectral ratios are consistent with local amplification of seismic waves observed at the corresponding frequencies.


Geochemistry Geophysics Geosystems | 2016

Late Cenozoic tephrostratigraphy offshore the southern Central American Volcanic Arc: 2. Implications for magma production rates and subduction erosion

Julie Schindlbeck; Steffen Kutterolf; Armin Freundt; Susanne M. Straub; Paola Vannucchi; Guillermo E. Alvarado

Pacific drill sites offshore Central America provide the unique opportunity to study the evolution of large explosive volcanism and the geotectonic evolution of the continental margin back into the Neogene. The temporal distribution of tephra layers established by tephrochonostratigraphy in Part 1 indicates a nearly continuous highly explosive eruption record for the Costa Rican and the Nicaraguan volcanic arc within the last 8 M.y. n nThe widely distributed marine tephra layers comprise the major fraction of the respective erupted tephra volumes and masses thus providing insights into regional and temporal variations of large-magnitude explosive eruptions along the southern Central American Volcanic Arc (CAVA). We observe three pulses of enhanced explosive magmatism between 0-1 Ma at the Cordillera Central, between 1-2 Ma at the Guanacaste and at >3 Ma at the Western Nicaragua segments. Averaged over the long-term the minimum erupted magma flux (per unit arc length) is ∼0.017 g/ms. n nTephra ages, constrained by Ar-Ar dating and by correlation with dated terrestrial tephras, yield time-variable accumulation rates of the intercalated pelagic sediments with four prominent phases of peak sedimentation rates that relate to tectonic processes of subduction erosion. The peak rate at >2.3 Ma near Osa particularly relates to initial Cocos Ridge subduction which began at 2.91±0.23 Ma as inferred by the 1.5 M.y. delayed appearance of the OIB geochemical signal in tephras from Barva volcano at 1.42 Ma. Subsequent tectonic re-arrangements probably involved crustal extension on the Guanacaste segment that favored the 2-1 Ma period of unusually massive rhyolite production.


Geochemistry Geophysics Geosystems | 2016

Late Cenozoic tephrostratigraphy offshore the southern Central American Volcanic Arc: 1. Tephra ages and provenance

Julie Schindlbeck; Steffen Kutterolf; Armin Freundt; Guillermo E. Alvarado; Kuo Lung Wang; Susanne M. Straub; Sidney R. Hemming; Matthias Frische; Jon D. Woodhead

We studied the tephra inventory of 18 deep sea drill sites from six DSDP/ODP legs (Legs 84, 138, 170, 202, 205, 206) and two IODP legs (Legs 334 and 344) offshore the southern Central American Volcanic Arc (CAVA). Eight drill sites are located on the incoming Cocos plate and ten drill sites on the continental slope of the Caribbean plate. In total we examined ∼840 ash-bearing horizons and identified ∼650 of these as primary ash beds of which 430 originated from the CAVA. Correlations of ash beds were established between marine cores and with terrestrial tephra deposits, using major and trace element glass compositions with respect to relative stratigraphic order. As a prerequisite for marine-terrestrial correlations we present a new geochemical data set for significant Neogene and Quaternary Costa Rican tephras. Moreover, new Ar/Ar ages for marine tephras have been determined and marine ash beds are also dated using the pelagic sedimentation rates. The resulting correlations and provenance analyses build a tephrochronostratigraphic framework for Costa Rica and Nicaragua that covers the last >8 Myr. We define 39 correlations of marine ash beds to specific tephra formations in Costa Rica and Nicaragua; from the 4.15 Ma Lower Sandillal Ignimbrite to the 3.5 ka Rincon de la Vieja Tephra from Costa Rica, as well as another 32 widely distributed tephra layers for which their specific region of origin along Costa Rica and Nicaragua can be constrained. This article is protected by copyright. All rights reserved.


Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology | 2012

Magmatic processes that generate chemically distinct silicic magmas in NW Costa Rica and the evolution of juvenile continental crust in oceanic arcs

C. D. Deering; Thomas A. Vogel; Lina C. Patino; David W. Szymanski; Guillermo E. Alvarado

Northwestern Costa Rica is built upon an oceanic plateau that has developed chemical and geophysical characteristics of the upper continental crust. A major factor in converting the oceanic plateau to continental crust is the production, evolution, and emplacement of silicic magmas. In Costa Rica, the Caribbean Large Igneous Province (CLIP) forms the overriding plate in the subduction of the Cocos Plate—a process that has occurred for at least the last 25 my. Igneous rocks in Costa Rica older than about 8xa0Ma have chemical compositions typical of ocean island basalts and intra-oceanic arcs. In contrast, younger igneous deposits contain abundant silicic rocks, which are significantly enriched in SiO2, alkalis, and light rare-earth elements and are geochemically similar to the average upper continental crust. Geophysical evidence (high Vp seismic velocities) also indicates a relatively thick (~40xa0km), addition of evolved igneous rocks to the CLIP. The silicic deposits of NW Costa Rica occur in two major compositional groups: a high-Ti and a low-Ti group with no overlap between the two. The major and trace element characteristics of these groups are consistent with these magmas being derived from liquids that were extracted from crystal mushes—either produced by crystallization or by partial melting of plutons near their solidi. In relative terms, the high-Ti silicic liquids were extracted from a hot, dry crystal mush with low oxygen fugacity, where plagioclase and pyroxene were the dominant phases crystallizing, along with lesser amounts of hornblende. In contrast, the low-Ti silicic liquids were extracted from a cool, wet crystal mush with high oxygen fugacity, where plagioclase and amphibole were the dominant phases crystallizing. The hot-dry-reducing magmas dominate the older sequence, but the youngest sequence contains only magmas from the cold-wet-oxidized group. Silicic volcanic deposits from other oceanic arcs (e.g., Izu-Bonin, Marianas) have chemical characteristics distinctly different from continental crust, whereas the NW Costa Rican silicic deposits have chemical characteristics nearly identical to the upper continental crust. The transition in NW Costa Rica from mafic oceanic arc and intra-oceanic magma to felsic, upper continental crust-type magma is governed by a combination of several important factors that may be absent in other arc settings: (1) thermal maturation of the thick Caribbean plateau, (2) regional or local crustal extension, and (3) establishment of an upper crustal reservoir.


Eos, Transactions American Geophysical Union | 2007

Central American Subduction System

Kaj Hoernle; Terry Plank; Eli A. Silver; Guillermo E. Alvarado; Victor Gonzales; Marino Protti

Workshop to Integrate Subduction Factory and Seismogenic Zone Studies in Central America, Heredia, Costa Rica, 18–22 June 2007 The driving force for great earthquakes and the cycling of water and climate-influencing volatiles (carbon dioxide, sulfur, halogens) across the convergent margin of Central America have been a focus of international efforts for over 8 years, as part of the MARGINS program of the U.S. National Science Foundation, the Collaborative Research Center (SFB 574) of the German Science Foundation, and the Central American science community. Over 120 scientists and students from 10 countries met in Costa Rica to synthesize this intense effort spanning from land to marine geological and geophysical studies.


Coleopterists Bulletin | 2018

Did Costa Rican Dung Beetles (Coleoptera: Scarabaeidae) Feed on Bison Dung before the Arrival of Spanish Cattle?

Bert Kohlmann; Ángel Solís; Guillermo E. Alvarado

Abstract n An analysis based on fossilized animal tracks, oral tradition, archaeological findings, and the distribution and biology of dung beetles is presented to suggest that Copris subpunctatus Gillet (Coleoptera: Scarabaeidae) probably fed on bison dung and switched to cow dung after cattle were introduced by the Spanish colonizing effort. This transition probably took place before the bison apparently became extinguished in Costa Rica at the end of 19th or beginning of the 20th century.


Tectonophysics | 2004

Middle Miocene to present plate tectonic history of the southern Central American Volcanic Arc

Ian MacMillan; Phillip B. Gans; Guillermo E. Alvarado


Bulletin of Volcanology | 2002

Origin of silicic volcanic rocks in Central Costa Rica: a study of a chemically variable ash-flow sheet in the Tiribí Tuff

Rachel S. Hannah; Thomas A. Vogel; Lina C. Patino; Guillermo E. Alvarado; Wendy Pérez; Diane R. Smith


Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research | 2006

Complex behavior and source model of the tremor at Arenal volcano, Costa Rica

Philippe Lesage; Mauricio M. Mora; Guillermo E. Alvarado; J. F. Pacheco; Jean-Philippe Métaxian


Bulletin of Volcanology | 2002

Pyroclastic flow generated by crater-wall collapse and outpouring of the lava pool of Arenal Volcano, Costa Rica

Guillermo E. Alvarado; Gerardo J. Soto

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Spencer G. Lucas

American Museum of Natural History

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Gerardo J. Soto

Instituto Costarricense de Electricidad

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Nemesio M. Pérez

Louisiana State University

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Lina C. Patino

Michigan State University

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