4.7 Article

Geometry of the Decollement Below Eastern Bangladesh and Implications for Seismic Hazard

Journal

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1029/2020JB021519

Keywords

fault geometry; earthquake hazard; Bangladesh; seismic reflection; lithospheric flexure

Funding

  1. National Research Foundation Singapore [NRFNRFF2013-06]
  2. Earth Observatory of Singapore (EOS)
  3. Singapore Ministry of Education (MOE) under the Research Centers of Excellence initiative
  4. Nanyang Technological University Startup grant

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Eastern Bangladesh lies on the seismically active Chittagong-Myanmar fold and thrust belt, where earthquake hazards exist. By analyzing 28 seismic reflection profiles, the depth of the basal decollement and earthquake potential in the region are revealed. The study shows dual-failure modes within the CMFB, supporting the hypothesis that regions with ductile deformation may still experience seismic behavior.
Eastern Bangladesh sits on the seismically active Chittagong-Myanmar fold and thrust belt (CMFB), a north-trending accretionary wedge on the eastern side of the India-Eurasia collision. Earthquakes on the basal decollement and associated thrusts within the CMFB present a hazard to this densely populated region. In this study, we interpret 28 seismic reflection profiles from both published and unpublished sources to constrain the depth of the basal decollement. To convert profiles from the time domain to the depth domain, we integrate sonic log and seismic stacking velocity data to generate time-velocity relationships for different parts of the CMFB. Our analysis reveals that the decollement is similar to 9 km deep in northeast and southeast Bangladesh, but shallows to similar to 5 km in east-central Bangladesh. The decollement has an area of 7.25 x 10(4) km(2) (similar to 150 x 450 km), making it capable of an Mw 8.5 earthquake. However, the warped geometry of this fault might act as a rupture barrier were a large earthquake to occur on the decollement. Our combined velocity and fault model lay the groundwork for future studies to address seismic segmentation, ground shaking, and rupture modeling in the CMFB. Finally, we use our compiled data set to analyze the evolution of fold kinematics in the CMFB. We observe that folding style and failure mode varies, from mainly ductile deformation in the foreland to mainly brittle in the hinterland. The dual-failure modes within the CMFB support the hypothesis that a region with ductile deformation may still be capable of seismic behavior.

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