Inferring the tectonic history of Northwestern Luzon, Philippines, using coral microatoll records

The Philippines sits in a tectonically complex region, bounded by oppositely-dipping subduction zones to the east and west. The possibility that these megathrusts could generate earthquakes and tsunamis that could potentially devastate thousands of lives and infrastructure is worrying, but our under...

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Main Author: Tan, Fang Yi
Other Authors: Aron Meltzner
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: 2019
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Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10356/77102
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-771022023-02-28T16:47:08Z Inferring the tectonic history of Northwestern Luzon, Philippines, using coral microatoll records Tan, Fang Yi Aron Meltzner Asian School of the Environment DRNTU::Science::Geology The Philippines sits in a tectonically complex region, bounded by oppositely-dipping subduction zones to the east and west. The possibility that these megathrusts could generate earthquakes and tsunamis that could potentially devastate thousands of lives and infrastructure is worrying, but our understanding of potential faults has hitherto been limited by the lack of geologic and geodetic data, especially in northwestern Luzon (Megawati, et al., 2008; Ramos & Tsutsumi, 2010; Hsu, et al., 2016). This motivated us to collect data from northwestern Luzon to fill this data gap. Here, I present the relative sea level (RSL) records of microatolls from northwestern Luzon – in particular from the Katipunan Barangay in the province of Ilocos Sur. The Katipunan microatolls (ranging from between ~4000 cal yrs BP to ~6000 cal yrs BP in age) are the only microatolls of their generation. Together, they reveal changes in RSL between ~4000 cal yrs BP and ~6000 cal yrs BP that cannot be explained by glacial isostatic adjustment (GIA) alone. Although we currently do not have sufficient data to distinguish if the RSL fluctuations were tectonically induced or sea-level driven, the fact that either of these would produce starkly different implications for hazard mitigation implores us to carry on further work to better understand the RSL signal we observe at Katipunan, and if this RSL oscillation is unique to that site. Bachelor of Science in Environmental Earth Systems Science 2019-05-07T09:08:02Z 2019-05-07T09:08:02Z 2019 Final Year Project (FYP) http://hdl.handle.net/10356/77102 en Nanyang Technological University 133 p. application/pdf
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
continent Asia
country Singapore
Singapore
content_provider NTU Library
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic DRNTU::Science::Geology
spellingShingle DRNTU::Science::Geology
Tan, Fang Yi
Inferring the tectonic history of Northwestern Luzon, Philippines, using coral microatoll records
description The Philippines sits in a tectonically complex region, bounded by oppositely-dipping subduction zones to the east and west. The possibility that these megathrusts could generate earthquakes and tsunamis that could potentially devastate thousands of lives and infrastructure is worrying, but our understanding of potential faults has hitherto been limited by the lack of geologic and geodetic data, especially in northwestern Luzon (Megawati, et al., 2008; Ramos & Tsutsumi, 2010; Hsu, et al., 2016). This motivated us to collect data from northwestern Luzon to fill this data gap. Here, I present the relative sea level (RSL) records of microatolls from northwestern Luzon – in particular from the Katipunan Barangay in the province of Ilocos Sur. The Katipunan microatolls (ranging from between ~4000 cal yrs BP to ~6000 cal yrs BP in age) are the only microatolls of their generation. Together, they reveal changes in RSL between ~4000 cal yrs BP and ~6000 cal yrs BP that cannot be explained by glacial isostatic adjustment (GIA) alone. Although we currently do not have sufficient data to distinguish if the RSL fluctuations were tectonically induced or sea-level driven, the fact that either of these would produce starkly different implications for hazard mitigation implores us to carry on further work to better understand the RSL signal we observe at Katipunan, and if this RSL oscillation is unique to that site.
author2 Aron Meltzner
author_facet Aron Meltzner
Tan, Fang Yi
format Final Year Project
author Tan, Fang Yi
author_sort Tan, Fang Yi
title Inferring the tectonic history of Northwestern Luzon, Philippines, using coral microatoll records
title_short Inferring the tectonic history of Northwestern Luzon, Philippines, using coral microatoll records
title_full Inferring the tectonic history of Northwestern Luzon, Philippines, using coral microatoll records
title_fullStr Inferring the tectonic history of Northwestern Luzon, Philippines, using coral microatoll records
title_full_unstemmed Inferring the tectonic history of Northwestern Luzon, Philippines, using coral microatoll records
title_sort inferring the tectonic history of northwestern luzon, philippines, using coral microatoll records
publishDate 2019
url http://hdl.handle.net/10356/77102
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