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Evolution of an accretionary complex along the north arm of the Island of Sulawesi, Indonesia
Authors:Yusuf Surachman Djajadihardja  Asahiko Taira  Hidekazu Tokuyama  Kan Aoike  Christian Reichert  Martin Block  Hans U Schluter  Sonke Neben
Institution:Agency for the Assessment and Application of Technology (BPPT), BPPT II Building, 19th Floor, Jl. M. H. Thamrin no. 8, Jakarta 10340, Indonesia,; Japan Marine Science and Technology Center (JAMSTEC), Natsushima, Yokosuka 237-0061, Japan,; Ocean Research Institute, University of Tokyo, 1-15-1, Minamidai, Nakano-Ku, Tokyo 164-8639, Japan and; Bundessantalt fur Geowiessenshaften und Rohstoffe, Stilleweg, D-30655 Hannover, Germany
Abstract:Abstract Seismic reflections across the accretionary prism of the North Sulawesi provide excellent images of the various structural domains landward of the frontal thrust. The structural domain in the accretionary prism area of the North Sulawesi Trench can be divided into four zones: (i) trench area; (ii) Zone A; (iii) Zone B; and (iv) Zone C. Zone A is an active imbrication zone where a decollement is well imaged. Zone B is dominated by out‐of‐sequence thrusts and small slope basins. Zone C is structurally high in the forearc basin, overlain by a thick sedimentary sequence. The subducted and accreted sedimentary packages are separated by the decollement. Topography of the oceanic basement is rough, both in the basin and beneath the wedge. The accretionary prism along the North Sulawesi Trench grew because of the collision between eastern Sulawesi and the Bangai–Sula microcontinent along the Sorong Fault in the middle Miocene. This collision produced a large rotation of the north arm of Sulawesi Island. Rotation and northward movement of the north arm of Sulawesi may have resulted in southward subduction and development of the accretionary wedge along North Sulawesi. Lateral variations are wider in the western areas relative to the eastern areas. This is due to greater convergence rates in the western area: 5 km/My for the west and 1.5 km/My for the east. An accretionary prism model indicates that the initiation of growth of the accretionary prism in the North Sulawesi Trench occurred approximately 5 Ma. A comparison between the North Sulawesi accretionary prism and the Nankai accretionary prism of Japan reveals similar internal structures, suggesting similar mechanical processes and structural evolution.
Keywords:accretionary prism  decollement  evolution  hemipelagic  North Sulawesi Trench  structural domain  turbidite
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