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Impact of India–Asia collision on SE Asia: The record in Borneo
Authors:Robert Hall  Marco WA van Hattum  Wim Spakman
Institution:

aSE Asia Research Group, Department of Geology, Royal Holloway University of London, Egham, Surrey, TW20 0EX, United Kingdom

bShell International Exploration and Production, Kessler Park 1, 2288GS Rijswijk, The Netherlands

cVening Meinesz Research School of Geodynamics, Faculty of Earth Sciences, Universiteit Utrecht, Budapestlaan 4, 3584CD Utrecht, The Netherlands

Abstract:Borneo occupies a central position in the Sundaland promontory of SE Asia. It has a complex Cenozoic geological history of sedimentation and deformation which began at about the same time that India is commonly suggested to have started to collide with Asia. Some tectonic reconstructions of east and SE Asia interpret a large SE Asian block with Borneo at its centre which has been rotated clockwise and displaced southwards along major strike–slip faults during the Cenozoic due to the indentation of Asia by India. However, the geological history of Borneo is not consistent with the island simply forming part of a large block extruded from Asia. The large clockwise rotations and displacements predicted by the indentor model for Borneo are incompatible with palaeomagnetic evidence and there is no evidence that the major strike–slip faults of the Asian mainland reach Borneo. Seismic tomography shows there is a deep high velocity anomaly in the lower mantle beneath SE Asia interpreted as subducted lithosphere but it can be explained just as well by alternative tectonic models as by the indentor model. Very great thicknesses of Cenozoic sediments are present in Borneo and circum-Borneo basins, and large amounts of sediment were transported to the Crocker turbidite fan of north Borneo from the Eocene to the Early Miocene, but all evidence indicates that these sediments were derived from local sources and not from distant sources in Asia elevated by India–Asia collision. The Cenozoic geological history of Borneo records subduction of the proto-South China Sea and Miocene collision after this ocean lithosphere was eliminated, and a variety of effects resulting from long-term subduction beneath SE Asia. There is little to indicate that India–Asia collision has influenced the Cenozoic geological record in Borneo.
Keywords:Sundaland  Borneo geology  Tomography  Strike–slip faults  Sediment provenance
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