A west-dipping seismogenic boundary beneath the Chia-Yi area of western Taiwan

Taiwan is one of the most typical arc-continental collision systems in the world. The Taiwan orogeny is often explained by the thin-skin model, where a shallow decollement, with depths of less than 10 km, is considered as the crustal deformation boundary for generating significant mountains on the i...

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Main Authors: Min-Hung Shih, Cheng-Horng Lin, Hsin-Chieh Pu, Ya-Chuan Lai, Hsiao-Fen Lee
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Chinese Geoscience Union 2018-01-01
Series:Terrestrial, Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences
Online Access: http://tao.cgu.org.tw/media/k2/attachments/v295p499.pdf
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spelling doaj-960ba44af0944af7b5266b0e268d14142020-11-25T01:05:18ZengChinese Geoscience UnionTerrestrial, Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences1017-08392311-76802018-01-0129549950810.3319/TAO.2018.05.17.01A west-dipping seismogenic boundary beneath the Chia-Yi area of western TaiwanMin-Hung ShihCheng-Horng LinHsin-Chieh PuYa-Chuan LaiHsiao-Fen LeeTaiwan is one of the most typical arc-continental collision systems in the world. The Taiwan orogeny is often explained by the thin-skin model, where a shallow decollement, with depths of less than 10 km, is considered as the crustal deformation boundary for generating significant mountains on the island of Taiwan. In this study, the seismic data generated by crustal earthquakes, recorded by seismic stations in the Chia-Yi area of western Taiwan was examined to find the crustal structures beneath the Taiwan orogeny. A significant velocity boundary below the decollement was found from unambiguous multiple secondary waves and phases of primary waves converted to secondary waves. Careful comparison between the observations and calculated results of the travel-time and ray-path indicates that this boundary is dipping to the west at ~10 degrees, which, surprisingly, is dipping to the opposite direction of the proposed decollement. It is also interesting to note that this boundary is not only a velocity boundary but also consistent with a seismicity boundary. This west-dipping boundary is the major seismogenic boundary in the upper crust, while the east-dipping decollement proposed earlier is a geological boundary. As a result, the westward dipping boundary observed in this study is more suitable, than the eastward dipping decollement, to be the seismogenic boundary in the Chia-Yi area. http://tao.cgu.org.tw/media/k2/attachments/v295p499.pdf
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Min-Hung Shih
Cheng-Horng Lin
Hsin-Chieh Pu
Ya-Chuan Lai
Hsiao-Fen Lee
spellingShingle Min-Hung Shih
Cheng-Horng Lin
Hsin-Chieh Pu
Ya-Chuan Lai
Hsiao-Fen Lee
A west-dipping seismogenic boundary beneath the Chia-Yi area of western Taiwan
Terrestrial, Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences
author_facet Min-Hung Shih
Cheng-Horng Lin
Hsin-Chieh Pu
Ya-Chuan Lai
Hsiao-Fen Lee
author_sort Min-Hung Shih
title A west-dipping seismogenic boundary beneath the Chia-Yi area of western Taiwan
title_short A west-dipping seismogenic boundary beneath the Chia-Yi area of western Taiwan
title_full A west-dipping seismogenic boundary beneath the Chia-Yi area of western Taiwan
title_fullStr A west-dipping seismogenic boundary beneath the Chia-Yi area of western Taiwan
title_full_unstemmed A west-dipping seismogenic boundary beneath the Chia-Yi area of western Taiwan
title_sort west-dipping seismogenic boundary beneath the chia-yi area of western taiwan
publisher Chinese Geoscience Union
series Terrestrial, Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences
issn 1017-0839
2311-7680
publishDate 2018-01-01
description Taiwan is one of the most typical arc-continental collision systems in the world. The Taiwan orogeny is often explained by the thin-skin model, where a shallow decollement, with depths of less than 10 km, is considered as the crustal deformation boundary for generating significant mountains on the island of Taiwan. In this study, the seismic data generated by crustal earthquakes, recorded by seismic stations in the Chia-Yi area of western Taiwan was examined to find the crustal structures beneath the Taiwan orogeny. A significant velocity boundary below the decollement was found from unambiguous multiple secondary waves and phases of primary waves converted to secondary waves. Careful comparison between the observations and calculated results of the travel-time and ray-path indicates that this boundary is dipping to the west at ~10 degrees, which, surprisingly, is dipping to the opposite direction of the proposed decollement. It is also interesting to note that this boundary is not only a velocity boundary but also consistent with a seismicity boundary. This west-dipping boundary is the major seismogenic boundary in the upper crust, while the east-dipping decollement proposed earlier is a geological boundary. As a result, the westward dipping boundary observed in this study is more suitable, than the eastward dipping decollement, to be the seismogenic boundary in the Chia-Yi area.
url http://tao.cgu.org.tw/media/k2/attachments/v295p499.pdf
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