Skip to main content

CienciaPR Menu

  • Home
  • About
    • About CienciaPR
    • Our Team
    • Our Initiatives
    • Our Partners
    • FAQs
    • CienciaPR Blogs
  • Students
    • Students
    • High School
    • Undergrad & Postbac
    • Graduate Students
    • Scientists in Service online
  • Professionals
    • Science Professionals
    • Postdocs
    • Faculty
    • Educators
    • Industry and Entrepreneurs
  • General Public
    • General Public
    • Podcasts
    • Science News
    • Science in PR: Resources & Organizations
    • ¡Ciencia Boricua! Book
    • ¡Ciencia Boricua! Lecture Series
  • Forums
  • Events
  • Get Involved

User menu

  • Sign Up!
  • Reset Password
  • Login
  • English
  • Español
Ciencia Puerto Rico

Ciencia Puerto Rico

Welcome to CienciaPR, an expert and resource network for all who are interested in science and Puerto Rico.

Search form

CienciaPR Twitter CienciaPR Facebook CienciaPR linkedIn CafePress News Feeds Donate

Anuncio especial de Abbvie

  • View(active tab)
  • Publications
My Information
Daniel Alberto Laó Dávila's picture
Send me a private message Define Professional Relation See member's publications

Daniel Alberto Laó Dávila

Professor

Oklahoma State University

Sector & Position: Academic-University: Full Professor (or above)
Primary Scientific Interest: Earth and Atmospheric Sciences, Geology
My Websites
Personal/Blog Website: https://experts.okstate.edu/daniel.lao_davila
Work Website: http://geology.okstate.edu/
School Website: http://www.okstate.edu
LinkedIn
Training Information
2008 - Ph.D., Geology,
Awards & Achievements
July 2024
Mentoring, Entrepreneurship, and Volunteering
Entrepreneurial Interest: Interested
I am interested in mentoring : High School Students, Undergraduates, Graduate Students
About Me and Project Info

About Me:

I am a structural geologist. I earned my B.S. from the Universidad de Puerto Rico, Mayagüez, my M.S. from Florida International University, and a Ph.D. from the University of Pittsburgh.

Project Info:

Tertiary tectonics of western Puerto Rico; paleostress and paleomagnetic study: This study was conducted to improve our understanding of the Tertiary tectonics of the northeastern North America-Caribbean plate boundary. For this purpose, fault-slip and paleomagnetic data was obtained for Eocene, Oligocene, and Miocene sedimentary rocks. The Focal Mechanism Stress Inversion software (Gephart, 1990) was used to determine paleostress directions. Paleostress results indicate that in the late Eocene-early Oligocene deformation was characterized by NE-SW (present coordinates) compression and left-lateral slip along faults in the Great Southern Puerto Rico Fault Zone. Post-mid Miocene-early Pliocene N-S tension was generated when convergence between the Caribbean and North American plates caused arching of the PRVIM, thus locally extending the outer arc of this structure. The younger E-W tension is associated with the opening of the Mona Rift, and results from the separation of Puerto Rico and Hispaniola. Paleomagnetic data support 38°-45° counterclockwise rotation (van Fossen et al., 1989) of the island since the Eocene, but differential rotation between structural blocks is inconclusive.

Internal structure and emplacement of serpentinite in western Puerto Rico: In this study, mesostructures within two serpentinite belts and their contacts with Late Cretaceous sedimentary and volcanic rocks where studied to characterize the deformation and emplacement of the serpentinite within an oblique subduction zone setting. The main objectives of this study are to better understand the emplacement mechanisms of serpentinite in oblique subduction zones, and the tectonic history of the North America-Caribbean plate boundary zone. These are important questions because their answers have implications on our understanding of transpression along oblique subduction zones and on tectonic evolution models for the Caribbean Plate. Serpentinite belts in Puerto Rico represent one of the oldest rocks in the North America-Caribbean plate boundary zone (Montgomery et al., 1994) and their emplacement has been attributed to diapirism (Mattson, 1960), and to thrusting of an ophiolite mélange (Mattson, 1973). Results from this study reveal a northeast-southwest maximum strain axis, and strain partitioning expressed as northwest-striking thrusts and foliations, and east-striking left-lateral shear zones. Brittle and ductile compressive structures at contacts, suggest that thrust emplacement is the dominant emplacement mechanism and not diapirism. Structural relations also suggest that transpression in the Puerto Rican part of the North American-Caribbean plate boundary begun in the early Tertiary and ended in the late Eocene.

Recent Publications:
• Laó-Dávila, D.A. and Anderson, T.H., 2009, Kinematic analysis of serpentinite structures and the manifestation of transpression in southwestern Puerto Rico: Journal of Structural Geology, v. 31, p. 1472-1489.

• Mann, P., Prentice, C.S., Hippolyte, J-C., Grindlay, N.R., Abrams, L.J., and Laó-Dávila, D., 2005, Reconnaissance study of Late Quaternary faulting along Cerro Goden fault zone, western Puerto Rico, in Mann, P., ed., Active tectonics and seismic hazards of Puerto Rico, the Virgin Islands, and offshore areas: Boulder, Colorado, Geological Society of America Special Paper, v. 385, p. 115-138.

Location and Contact Info
Daniel Alberto Laó Dávila
Nothing

CienciaPR Member Search

Advanced Search
All Members

Enter UPR-IPERT

UPR-IPERT Register

Members with Similar Interests

Victor Jeriel Aponte
Victor Jeriel Aponte's picture
Interamerican University
Vanesa Mary Muniz Llorens
Vanesa Mary Muniz Llorens's picture
University of Puerto Rico - Mayaguez
Shirley Droz
Shirley Droz's picture
Colegio San Conrado
Veronica Maldonado
Veronica Maldonado's picture
Germán Rieckehoff
  •  
  • 1 of 89
  • siguiente ›
You can also search for members based on specific aspects of their profiles.

Daniel's Forum Posts

  • Forum Topic - Job - Post Doctoral Research Associate

Scientific Publications

Find resources related to scientific publications

FUNDING ANNOUNCEMENTS

See our funding feeds from the NIH and the NSF NIH and NSF logos

Job Feeds

See our jobs feeds from various sources. Jobs

Upcoming Events

  • 10/15/25 - Charla: Population Genomics of Microorganisms and Their Hosts
  • 10/16/25 - Charla: Microbiomes as Architects of Biology: The Role of the New Puerto Rico Center for Microbiome Sciences in Catalyzing Discovery
  • 11/14/25 - Mini-symposium: Environment, Cancer, and Microbiome: Interdisciplinary Scientific Perspectives
  • 12/17/25 - Charla: Dissecting Host–Microbe Interactions: From Methods to Microbiota-Based Interventions in Aging and Disease 

Copyright © 2006-Present CienciaPR and CAPRI, except where otherwise indicated, all rights reserved
Privacy | Terms | Community Norms | About CienciaPR | Contact Us