Lithospheric models supported by the Caribbean and Levant examples help rethink transpression at plate boundaries

Research Article (Open Access)

Title
Lithospheric models supported by the Caribbean and Levant examples help rethink transpression at plate boundaries
Authors
Anthony Jourdon, Laetitia Le Pourhiet, Dave A. May, Manuel Pubellier, Alice-Agnes Gabriel (and co-authors)
Journal
Nature Communications Volume 17, Article number: 1290 (2026)
DOI
10.1038/s41467-025-68051-2
Publication date
06 January 2026
Abstract
Strike-slip restraining bends, such as the Levant Fault (push-up systems) and the Jamaican fault network (duplex systems), show contrasting fault geometries and deformation patterns that reflect different modes of lithospheric-scale strain localization. To investigate what drives this variability, the authors develop 3D numerical models of transpressional strike-slip systems using heterogeneous simple shear boundary conditions and thermally dependent, non-linear rheology. Unlike models that impose velocity discontinuities, this approach allows faults to localize spontaneously and generates three end-member configurations: (1) push-up systems with a single strike-slip fault and outward-propagating thrusts, (2) duplex systems with interacting parallel faults linked by P-shears, and (3) non-interacting parallel faults. The results emphasize how inherited lithospheric heterogeneities control the long-term evolution of transpressional plate-boundary deformation.
Full text
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