The Neo-Tectonic Structure of the South western Tip of the Okinawa Trough

Abstract

The Ilan Plain is located at the southwestern tip of the Okinawa Trough backarc basin, which prop a gates west ward into the Taiwan orogen. From three moderate earthquakes which occurred near the coast line of the Ilan Plain, one of magnitude 6.2 on 15 May 2002 and the other two of magnitudes 5.51 and 5.49 on 5 March 2005, we at tempted to understand the relation ship between the earthquake mechanisms and the geological context. Seven seismic reflection profiles collected roughly parallel to the coast line of the Ilan Plain were used in this work. A structural fault, with a significant normal faulting component trending approximately ENE-WSW, is identified to the east of the doublet earthquakes of 5 March 2005. Because this fault follows the ENE-WSW trend of the after shock seismicity, we named it the Ilan Shelf Fault, which might extend to the east beyond the Ilan continental shelf spur. However, the centroid seismic moment tensor solutions for the doublet earthquakes of 5 March 2005 are of a left-lateral strike-slip faulting type which are consistent with onland GPS observations. Hence, the Ilan Shelf Fault may have a left-lateral strike-slip component. Based on GPS data, we suggest that the northern Central Range block, bounded in the west by the Lishan Fault and in the north by the Ilan Shelf Fault, rotates clockwise. This rotation is ascribed to the northwestward collision of the Luzon Arc against Taiwan. Thus, there is a left-lateral strike-slip and an extensional motion along the Ilan Shelf Fault. The northern Central Range block is tilting northward which may also in duce the normal faulting component of the Ilan Shelf Fault. In short, the Ilan Shelf Fault could be a major tectonic and structural feature bounding the southern end of the Okinawa Trough backarc basin.

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Published by The Chinese Geoscience Union