Evidence of an east-dipping slab beneath the southern end of the Philippine Trench (1°N–6°N) as revealed by ISC-EHB

We examine recently released global seismic datasets in 3D visualization to study slab configurations in the Mindanao-Molucca region, where the present-day arc-arc collision of divergent double subduction propagates northward and attains completion on Mindanao Island, Philippines. The activity of in...

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Main Authors: Po-Fei Chen, Mei Chien, Craig R. Bina, Hung-Yu Yen, Erlinton Antonio Olavere
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2020-12-01
Series:Journal of Asian Earth Sciences: X
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2590056020300104
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spelling doaj-4c5fb24c0e614d44a2bcdaa4ac8fd08f2020-12-23T05:04:07ZengElsevierJournal of Asian Earth Sciences: X2590-05602020-12-014100034Evidence of an east-dipping slab beneath the southern end of the Philippine Trench (1°N–6°N) as revealed by ISC-EHBPo-Fei Chen0Mei Chien1Craig R. Bina2Hung-Yu Yen3Erlinton Antonio Olavere4Department of Earth Sciences, National Central University, Taoyuan, Taiwan; Corresponding author.Department of Earth Sciences, National Central University, Taoyuan, TaiwanDepartment of Earth and Planetary Sciences, Northwestern University, Evanston, IL, USADepartment of Earth Sciences, National Central University, Taoyuan, TaiwanDepartment of Science and Technology - Philippine Institute of Volcanology and Seismology, PhilippinesWe examine recently released global seismic datasets in 3D visualization to study slab configurations in the Mindanao-Molucca region, where the present-day arc-arc collision of divergent double subduction propagates northward and attains completion on Mindanao Island, Philippines. The activity of inter-plate thrust earthquakes in the Philippine Trench is not significant until Mindanao (6°N) is reached, while shallow earthquakes on the island exhibit predominantly strike-slip movements on the Cotabato and Philippine Faults. The spatial distributions of GCMT thrust-type earthquakes shallower than 60 km reveal that current collisions mostly occur along the Central and Talaud-Miangas Ridges. ISC-EHB events deeper than 80 km, as well as Slab2 contours, show the eastward-dipping trench of the Halmahera slab flipping to the westward-dipping Philippine Trench northward. We identify a zone of ISC-EHB earthquakes steeply dipping to the east beneath the southern end of the Philippine Trench (1°N–6°N) that is not modeled by Slab2. This feature of a steeply east-dipping slab is explained by collision of the subduction arc and is consistent with steeply plunging T-axes of earthquakes. The identification of the east-dipping slab and estimation of its extent are crucial for understanding geodynamic and plate-boundary evolution in the Mindanao-Molucca region.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2590056020300104Mindanao-Molucca regionDivergent double subductionEast-dipping slab beneath Philippine TrenchSubduction polarity flipHalmahera slab
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Po-Fei Chen
Mei Chien
Craig R. Bina
Hung-Yu Yen
Erlinton Antonio Olavere
spellingShingle Po-Fei Chen
Mei Chien
Craig R. Bina
Hung-Yu Yen
Erlinton Antonio Olavere
Evidence of an east-dipping slab beneath the southern end of the Philippine Trench (1°N–6°N) as revealed by ISC-EHB
Journal of Asian Earth Sciences: X
Mindanao-Molucca region
Divergent double subduction
East-dipping slab beneath Philippine Trench
Subduction polarity flip
Halmahera slab
author_facet Po-Fei Chen
Mei Chien
Craig R. Bina
Hung-Yu Yen
Erlinton Antonio Olavere
author_sort Po-Fei Chen
title Evidence of an east-dipping slab beneath the southern end of the Philippine Trench (1°N–6°N) as revealed by ISC-EHB
title_short Evidence of an east-dipping slab beneath the southern end of the Philippine Trench (1°N–6°N) as revealed by ISC-EHB
title_full Evidence of an east-dipping slab beneath the southern end of the Philippine Trench (1°N–6°N) as revealed by ISC-EHB
title_fullStr Evidence of an east-dipping slab beneath the southern end of the Philippine Trench (1°N–6°N) as revealed by ISC-EHB
title_full_unstemmed Evidence of an east-dipping slab beneath the southern end of the Philippine Trench (1°N–6°N) as revealed by ISC-EHB
title_sort evidence of an east-dipping slab beneath the southern end of the philippine trench (1°n–6°n) as revealed by isc-ehb
publisher Elsevier
series Journal of Asian Earth Sciences: X
issn 2590-0560
publishDate 2020-12-01
description We examine recently released global seismic datasets in 3D visualization to study slab configurations in the Mindanao-Molucca region, where the present-day arc-arc collision of divergent double subduction propagates northward and attains completion on Mindanao Island, Philippines. The activity of inter-plate thrust earthquakes in the Philippine Trench is not significant until Mindanao (6°N) is reached, while shallow earthquakes on the island exhibit predominantly strike-slip movements on the Cotabato and Philippine Faults. The spatial distributions of GCMT thrust-type earthquakes shallower than 60 km reveal that current collisions mostly occur along the Central and Talaud-Miangas Ridges. ISC-EHB events deeper than 80 km, as well as Slab2 contours, show the eastward-dipping trench of the Halmahera slab flipping to the westward-dipping Philippine Trench northward. We identify a zone of ISC-EHB earthquakes steeply dipping to the east beneath the southern end of the Philippine Trench (1°N–6°N) that is not modeled by Slab2. This feature of a steeply east-dipping slab is explained by collision of the subduction arc and is consistent with steeply plunging T-axes of earthquakes. The identification of the east-dipping slab and estimation of its extent are crucial for understanding geodynamic and plate-boundary evolution in the Mindanao-Molucca region.
topic Mindanao-Molucca region
Divergent double subduction
East-dipping slab beneath Philippine Trench
Subduction polarity flip
Halmahera slab
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2590056020300104
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