Biology, asked by tahira6788, 1 year ago

Seismic images of the sliver strike-slip fault and back thrust in the andaman-nicobar region


MauryaAJ: Hii tahira

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Answered by manojsah7631
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The sliver strike‐slip Great Sumatra Fault (GSF) traverses mainland Sumatra from the Sunda Strait in the southeast to Banda Aceh in the northwest, and defines the present day plate boundary between the Sunda Plate in the north and the Burmese Sliver Plate in the south. It has been well studied on mainland Sumatra but poorly north of Banda Aceh in the Andaman Sea. Here we present deep seismic reflection images along the northward extension of the GSF over 700 km until it joins the Andaman Sea Spreading Centre, and we interpret these images in the light of earthquake, gravity, and bathymetry data. We find that the GSF has two strands between Banda Aceh and Nicobar Island: a transpression in the south and a deep narrow active rift system in the north, dotted with volcanoes in the center, suggesting that the volcanic arc is coincident with rifting. Farther north of Nicobar Island, an active strike‐slip fault, the Andaman‐Nicobar Fault, cuts through a rifted deep basin until its intersection with the Andaman Sea Spreading Centre. The volcanic arc lies just east of the rift basin. The western margin of this basin seems to be a rifted continental margin, tilted westward, and flooring the Andaman‐Nicobar fore‐arc basin. The Andaman‐Nicobar fore‐arc basin is bounded in the west by back thrusts similar to the West Andaman and Mentawai faults. The cluster of seismicity after the 2004 great Andaman‐Sumatra earthquake just north of Nicobar Island coincides with the intersection of two strike‐slip fault systems.

Answered by Anonymous
0
Silver & Reed 1988), however its relationship with backstop is not ...


WAF: WestAndaman Fault. ....


(b) Blow-up seismic image in the time domain showing the backthrust ...


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