Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4733582 Journal of Structural Geology 2009 16 Pages PDF
Abstract

The Misool–Onin–Kumawa Ridge (Eastern Indonesia) is a broad anticline in the lower plate of the Seram subduction system. In the south it lies between the Seram accretionary wedge and the young Lengguru fold-and-thrust belt (<8 My). A large seismic dataset from recent petroleum exploration in the area allows the ridge to be interpreted as the result of a dual system of thin-skinned and thick-skinned tectonics. A forebulge effect may be superimposed on the emergent sections of the ridge (Onin and Kumawa Domes), where the morphology has been reactivated.The evolution results from what appears to be a continuum of deformation through three major stages: (1) formation of a Messinian thin-skinned fold-and-thrust belt over a shaly–silty Permian–Paleocene unit; (2) a Pliocene thick-skinned event responsible for the uplift of the ridge, possibly induced by the onset of continental subduction; and (3) recent Pleistocene deformation when thin-skinned tectonics resumed in the Seram Trough. Currently, the Seram wedge abuts the ridge, transferring compression northward into the Salawati Basin.The jumps of active detachment levels may be a response to changes in subduction parameters (velocity, rugosity, etc.) during the transition between oceanic and continental subduction, or at least from thinned crust to thicker continental crust.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Geology
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