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Publications
Helmholtz Centre Potsdam
GFZ German Research Centre for Geosciences Abstract (EDOC: 14141)Newly pre-stack depth-migrated seismic images resolve the structural details of the western Java forearc and
plate interface. The structural segmentation of the forearc into discrete mechanical domains correlates with
distinct deformation styles. Approximately 2/3 of the trench sediment fill is detached and incorporated into
frontal prism imbricates, while the floor sequence is underthrust beneath the décollement. Western Java,
however, differs markedly from margins such as Nankai or Barbados, where a uniform, continuous
décollement reflector has been imaged. In our study area, the plate interface reveals a spatially irregular,
nonlinear pattern characterized by the morphological relief of subducted seamounts and thicker than
average patches of underthrust sediment. The underthrust sediment is associated with a low velocity zone as
determined from wide-angle data. Active underplating is not resolved, but likely contributes to the uplift of
the large bivergent wedge that constitutes the forearc high. Our profile is located 100 km west of the 2006
Java tsunami earthquake. The heterogeneous décollement zone regulates the friction behavior of the shallow
subduction environment where the earthquake occurred. The alternating pattern of enhanced frictional
contact zones associated with oceanic basement relief and weak material patches of underthrust sediment
influences seismic coupling and possibly contributed to the heterogeneous slip distribution. Our seismic
images resolve a steeply dipping splay fault, which originates at the décollement and terminates at the sea
floor and which potentially contributes to tsunami generation during co-seismic activity. (2009): Anatomy of the western Java plate interface from depth-migrated seismic images. Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 288, 3-4, 399-407. |
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