The recent convergence on the NW Borneo Wedge-a crustal-scale gravity gliding evidenced from GPS

The existence of an active compression on the frontal fold-and-thrust belt (FTB) of the NW Borneo Wedge is a long debate. Because of the absence of seismicity, the frontal FTB is traditionally considered as inactive and generally attributed to the thin-skin gravity-driven Baram Basin. However, there...

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Main Authors: Sapin, Francois, Hermawan, Iwan, Pubellier, Manuel, Vigny, Christophe, Ringenbach, Jean-Claude
Other Authors: Earth Observatory of Singapore
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: 2020
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Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/144213
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1442132020-10-24T20:11:32Z The recent convergence on the NW Borneo Wedge-a crustal-scale gravity gliding evidenced from GPS Sapin, Francois Hermawan, Iwan Pubellier, Manuel Vigny, Christophe Ringenbach, Jean-Claude Earth Observatory of Singapore Engineering::Environmental engineering Intraplate Processes Dynamics The existence of an active compression on the frontal fold-and-thrust belt (FTB) of the NW Borneo Wedge is a long debate. Because of the absence of seismicity, the frontal FTB is traditionally considered as inactive and generally attributed to the thin-skin gravity-driven Baram Basin. However, there are some signs of convergence and compression (GPS velocities and horizontal stress field measured from borehole analysis) do exist between the NWBorneo area and Sunda Plate (Dangerous-Grounds). Revisited GPS data, combined with a rigorous structural study of theNWBorneoWedge suggest that the recent compression recorded on the frontal FTB is the result of a crustal-scale gravity-driven mechanism, the orogenic collapse of the NW Borneo in the Sabah-northern Sarawak area since 1.9 Myr. These results provide a new understanding of the recent behaviour of the NW Borneo Wedge which can be included in a continuum of the wedge history. Published version 2020-10-21T02:45:16Z 2020-10-21T02:45:16Z 2013 Journal Article Sapin, F., Hermawan, I., Pubellier, M., Vigny, C., & Ringenbach, J.-C. (2013). The recent convergence on the NW Borneo Wedge-a crustal-scale gravity gliding evidenced from GPS. Geophysical Journal International, 193(2), 549-556. doi:10.1093/gji/ggt054 0956-540X https://hdl.handle.net/10356/144213 10.1093/gji/ggt054 2-s2.0-84876799338 2 193 549 556 en Geophysical Journal International This article has been accepted for publication in Geophysical Journal International © 2013 The Author(s). Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of The Royal Astronomical Society. All rights reserved. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Engineering::Environmental engineering
Intraplate Processes
Dynamics
spellingShingle Engineering::Environmental engineering
Intraplate Processes
Dynamics
Sapin, Francois
Hermawan, Iwan
Pubellier, Manuel
Vigny, Christophe
Ringenbach, Jean-Claude
The recent convergence on the NW Borneo Wedge-a crustal-scale gravity gliding evidenced from GPS
description The existence of an active compression on the frontal fold-and-thrust belt (FTB) of the NW Borneo Wedge is a long debate. Because of the absence of seismicity, the frontal FTB is traditionally considered as inactive and generally attributed to the thin-skin gravity-driven Baram Basin. However, there are some signs of convergence and compression (GPS velocities and horizontal stress field measured from borehole analysis) do exist between the NWBorneo area and Sunda Plate (Dangerous-Grounds). Revisited GPS data, combined with a rigorous structural study of theNWBorneoWedge suggest that the recent compression recorded on the frontal FTB is the result of a crustal-scale gravity-driven mechanism, the orogenic collapse of the NW Borneo in the Sabah-northern Sarawak area since 1.9 Myr. These results provide a new understanding of the recent behaviour of the NW Borneo Wedge which can be included in a continuum of the wedge history.
author2 Earth Observatory of Singapore
author_facet Earth Observatory of Singapore
Sapin, Francois
Hermawan, Iwan
Pubellier, Manuel
Vigny, Christophe
Ringenbach, Jean-Claude
format Article
author Sapin, Francois
Hermawan, Iwan
Pubellier, Manuel
Vigny, Christophe
Ringenbach, Jean-Claude
author_sort Sapin, Francois
title The recent convergence on the NW Borneo Wedge-a crustal-scale gravity gliding evidenced from GPS
title_short The recent convergence on the NW Borneo Wedge-a crustal-scale gravity gliding evidenced from GPS
title_full The recent convergence on the NW Borneo Wedge-a crustal-scale gravity gliding evidenced from GPS
title_fullStr The recent convergence on the NW Borneo Wedge-a crustal-scale gravity gliding evidenced from GPS
title_full_unstemmed The recent convergence on the NW Borneo Wedge-a crustal-scale gravity gliding evidenced from GPS
title_sort recent convergence on the nw borneo wedge-a crustal-scale gravity gliding evidenced from gps
publishDate 2020
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/144213
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