Seismic images of a collision zone offshore NW Sabah/Borneo |
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Authors: | Dieter Franke Udo Barckhausen Ingo Heyde Mark Tingay Nordin Ramli |
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Affiliation: | aFederal Institute for Geosciences and Natural Resources (BGR), Stilleweg 2, 30655 Hannover, Germany;bSchool of Earth & Environmental Sciences, University of Adelaide, Geology and Geophysics, SA 5005, Australia;cPetroliam Nasional Berhad (PETRONAS) Kuala Lumpur City Centre, 50088 Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia |
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Abstract: | Multichannel reflection seismic data from the southern South China Sea, refraction and gravity modelling were used to investigate the compressional sedimentary structures of the collision-prone continental margin off NW Borneo. An elongated imbricate deepwater fan, the toe Thrust Zone bounds the Northwest Borneo Trough to the southeast. The faults separating the individual imbricates cut through post-Early Miocene sediments and curve down to a carbonate platform at the top of the subsiding continental Dangerous Grounds platform that forms the major detachment surface. The age of deformation migrates outward toward the front of the wedge. We propose crustal shortening mechanisms as the main reason for the formation of the imbricate fan. At the location of the in the past defined Lower Tertiary Thrust Sheet tectonostratigraphic province a high velocity body was found but with a much smaller extend than the previously defined structure. The high velocity structure may be interpreted either as carbonates that limit the transfer of seismic energy into the sedimentary layers beneath or as Paleogene Crocker sediments dissected by remnants of a proto-South China Sea oceanic crust that were overthrust onto a southward migrating attenuated continental block of the Dangerous Grounds during plate convergence. |
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Keywords: | Northwest Borneo margin Sedimentary succession Seismic data |
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