4.7 Article

Three-Dimensional Stress Model of the Collision-Subduction Junction East of Taiwan: Implications for the Decoupling of the Luzon Arc During Subduction

Journal

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1029/2022JB024054

Keywords

continent arc collision; Luzon Arc decoupling

Funding

  1. Academia Sinica postdoctoral fellowship
  2. Ministry of Science and Technology (MOST) of Taiwan [MOST-109-2116-M-001-034, MOST-107-2116-M-001-020-MY3]

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The Luzon Arc, carried by the Philippine Sea Plate and converging with the Eurasian Plate, is colliding obliquely and adding to the Eurasian continental margin to form the Taiwan orogen. The northern segment of the Luzon Arc is subducted under the Ryukyu Trench. However, how this segment responds to collision and subduction is not well understood. In this study, a three-dimensional spatial clustering approach in eastern Taiwan was employed to investigate the variation of stress along the collision suture. The results show that the stress regime in the northern crustal segment of the Luzon Arc undergoes rotation and tilting, likely influenced by the oblique subduction and bending of the Central Range crustal block.
Carried by the Philippine Sea Plate converging with the Eurasian Plate, the Luzon Arc is obliquely colliding with and accreting to the Eurasian continental margin to build the Taiwan orogen. Northward along the collision suture, the Luzon Arc extends offshore and is being subducted under the Ryukyu Trench. How the northern segment of the Luzon Arc responds to both collision and subduction remains poorly understood. At present, seismic tomography and conventional stress analyses cannot fully capture images of this arc or discern how it deforms following subduction. We employed a three-dimensional spatial clustering approach in eastern Taiwan to reveal how stress varies along the collision suture. Our results show that the maximum horizontal compression orientation, S-H, is sub-parallel to the plate motion at all depths across the lithosphere, except at shallow depths for the northern segment, where S-H exhibits a clockwise rotation from convergence-parallel by 10 degrees-30 degrees. Accompanying the S-H rotation in the northern crustal segment is a tilt of the maximum compressive P-axes by approximately 20 degrees. We interpret this systematic variation along the suture and with depth as resulting from the rotation of the stress regime in the crust of the Luzon Arc forced by the oblique subduction, and likely augmented by the bending of the Central Range crustal block. The location of rotation/tilting and its disparity with depth may signify a decoupling of the volcanic arc from the mantle lithosphere during early subduction.

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