Structural interpretation of Mae Suai Basin, Chiang Rai Province, based on gravity data analysis and modelling

© 2019 The Mae Suai Basin, an intermountain basin in northern Thailand, became an area of interest in 2014 following the M6.1 earthquake that reactivated the ENE-WSW trending Mae Loa Fault. This fault is associated with the Cenozoic rifting. Terrestrial gravity modelling is a suitable method to vis...

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Main Authors: Suebchat Kanthiya, Niti Mangkhemthong, Christopher K. Morley
Format: Journal
Published: 2019
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spelling th-cmuir.6653943832-659162019-08-05T04:44:27Z Structural interpretation of Mae Suai Basin, Chiang Rai Province, based on gravity data analysis and modelling Suebchat Kanthiya Niti Mangkhemthong Christopher K. Morley Multidisciplinary © 2019 The Mae Suai Basin, an intermountain basin in northern Thailand, became an area of interest in 2014 following the M6.1 earthquake that reactivated the ENE-WSW trending Mae Loa Fault. This fault is associated with the Cenozoic rifting. Terrestrial gravity modelling is a suitable method to visualize subsurface geometry and understand its structural control related to the recent earthquakes. Six hundred twenty-seven terrestrial gravity stations with a spacing of ∼500 m were collected; standard gravity correction methods were applied with a density reduction of 2.67 g/cm 3 to produce the residual Complete Bouguer anomaly (CBA). The residual CBA map reveals a NNE-SSW striking basin, showing gravity lows are located within the basin. The gravity highs cover regions of Triassic granite intrusions to the west and Silurian-Devonian metasedimentary and Carboniferous sedimentary basements to the east. Structural edge detections and basin depth estimates indicate the main fault lineaments lie ENE-SWS and NNE-SSW striking along the eastern and northern margins respectively. These faults may act as splay faults of the active sinistral Mae Loa fault. The gravity models suggest that the Mae Suai Basin is an asymmetrical half-graben with a maximum depth of ∼770 m and a range of basin sediments from 1.9 to 2.3 g/cm 3 . The depocentre is located near the eastern boundary faults. The structural patterns present the rifting has formed within an extensional transfer zone that relates to a releasing bend fault in NNE-SSW trend, linked by the sinistral Mae Loa Fault in NE-SW trend. The E-W maximum of extension in the transfer zone is formed under the activation of the major Cenozoic strike-slip faults in Northern Thailand. 2019-08-05T04:44:27Z 2019-08-05T04:44:27Z 2019-02-01 Journal 24058440 2-s2.0-85061645347 10.1016/j.heliyon.2019.e01232 https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=85061645347&origin=inward http://cmuir.cmu.ac.th/jspui/handle/6653943832/65916
institution Chiang Mai University
building Chiang Mai University Library
country Thailand
collection CMU Intellectual Repository
topic Multidisciplinary
spellingShingle Multidisciplinary
Suebchat Kanthiya
Niti Mangkhemthong
Christopher K. Morley
Structural interpretation of Mae Suai Basin, Chiang Rai Province, based on gravity data analysis and modelling
description © 2019 The Mae Suai Basin, an intermountain basin in northern Thailand, became an area of interest in 2014 following the M6.1 earthquake that reactivated the ENE-WSW trending Mae Loa Fault. This fault is associated with the Cenozoic rifting. Terrestrial gravity modelling is a suitable method to visualize subsurface geometry and understand its structural control related to the recent earthquakes. Six hundred twenty-seven terrestrial gravity stations with a spacing of ∼500 m were collected; standard gravity correction methods were applied with a density reduction of 2.67 g/cm 3 to produce the residual Complete Bouguer anomaly (CBA). The residual CBA map reveals a NNE-SSW striking basin, showing gravity lows are located within the basin. The gravity highs cover regions of Triassic granite intrusions to the west and Silurian-Devonian metasedimentary and Carboniferous sedimentary basements to the east. Structural edge detections and basin depth estimates indicate the main fault lineaments lie ENE-SWS and NNE-SSW striking along the eastern and northern margins respectively. These faults may act as splay faults of the active sinistral Mae Loa fault. The gravity models suggest that the Mae Suai Basin is an asymmetrical half-graben with a maximum depth of ∼770 m and a range of basin sediments from 1.9 to 2.3 g/cm 3 . The depocentre is located near the eastern boundary faults. The structural patterns present the rifting has formed within an extensional transfer zone that relates to a releasing bend fault in NNE-SSW trend, linked by the sinistral Mae Loa Fault in NE-SW trend. The E-W maximum of extension in the transfer zone is formed under the activation of the major Cenozoic strike-slip faults in Northern Thailand.
format Journal
author Suebchat Kanthiya
Niti Mangkhemthong
Christopher K. Morley
author_facet Suebchat Kanthiya
Niti Mangkhemthong
Christopher K. Morley
author_sort Suebchat Kanthiya
title Structural interpretation of Mae Suai Basin, Chiang Rai Province, based on gravity data analysis and modelling
title_short Structural interpretation of Mae Suai Basin, Chiang Rai Province, based on gravity data analysis and modelling
title_full Structural interpretation of Mae Suai Basin, Chiang Rai Province, based on gravity data analysis and modelling
title_fullStr Structural interpretation of Mae Suai Basin, Chiang Rai Province, based on gravity data analysis and modelling
title_full_unstemmed Structural interpretation of Mae Suai Basin, Chiang Rai Province, based on gravity data analysis and modelling
title_sort structural interpretation of mae suai basin, chiang rai province, based on gravity data analysis and modelling
publishDate 2019
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=85061645347&origin=inward
http://cmuir.cmu.ac.th/jspui/handle/6653943832/65916
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