Inversion tectonics and dual decollements in southwestern Taiwan: implication from a dense seismic array
- National Chung Cheng University, Earth and Environmental Sciences, Chiayi, Taiwan (seiwhwg@gmail.com)
We employed dense seismic arrays to reveal the seismogenic zones beneath the foreland basin and the foothills in southwestern Taiwan. We used EqTransformer to pick earthquakes and P and S wave arrival time, GaMMA to associate earthquakes, and NonLinLoc to locate the earthquakes. Our results show that the thin-skinned thrust belts were mostly locked above a shallow decollement at a depth of ca. 6 km. Below it, a foreland-dipping seismogenic belt extends from the base of the shallow decollement to a depth of about 15 km, the deep decollement, beneath the coastal plain. We interpret this westward-dipping seismogenic belt as a passive roof duplex by inversion of the pre-existing graben-and-horst structure sliding along a ductile shear zone at a depth of 15 km during the ongoing orogeny.
How to cite: Wang, W.-H., Lin, Y.-S., Huang, W.-C., and Wen, S.: Inversion tectonics and dual decollements in southwestern Taiwan: implication from a dense seismic array, EGU General Assembly 2024, Vienna, Austria, 14–19 Apr 2024, EGU24-13778, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu24-13778, 2024.