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Dalrymple Trough: An active oblique-slip ocean–continent boundary in the northwest Indian Ocean
Authors:RA Edwards  TA Minshull  ER Flueh  C Kopp
Institution:aNational Oceanography Centre, Southampton, University of Southampton European Way, Southampton SO14 3ZH, UK;bIFM-GEOMAR, Wischhofstrasse 1-3, D-24148, Kiel, Germany
Abstract:The Dalrymple Trough marks part of the transform plate boundary between India and Arabia in the northern Arabian Sea. Oblique extension is presently active across this portion of the boundary at a rate of a few millimetres per year, and seismic reflection profiles across the trough confirm that it is an extensional structure. We present new swath bathymetric and wide-angle seismic data from the trough. The bathymetric data show that the trough is bounded by a single, steep, 3-km-high scarp to the southeast and a series of smaller, en-echelon scarps to the northwest. Wide-angle seismic data show that a typical oceanic crustal velocity structure is present to the northwest, with a crustal thickness of ~ 6 km. There is an abrupt change in crustal thickness and velocity structure at the northwestern edge of the trough, and the trough itself is underlain by 12-km-thick crust interpreted as thinned continental crust. Therefore we infer that Dalrymple Trough is an unusual obliquely extending plate boundary at which continental crust and oceanic crust are juxtaposed. The extensional deformation is focused on a single major fault in the continental lithosphere, but distributed over a region ~ 60 km wide in the oceanic lithosphere.
Keywords:plate boundary  Arabian Sea  seismic velocity  continental margin  oblique extension
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