4.5 Article

Strain and stress gradients through the backarc regions of Miocene western Japan: A new type of arc-parallel extension

Journal

JOURNAL OF STRUCTURAL GEOLOGY
Volume 173, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jsg.2023.104894

Keywords

Stalled rift propagation; Stress tensor inversion; Stress field; Okinawa trough; Ryukyu arc; SW Japan arc

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This study reports the unique arc-parallel extension that occurred in the backarc regions of the northern Ryukyu and western SW Japan arcs during the Middle Miocene. Through fault-slip data analysis and dating of magmatism, it was determined that the extensional zone was located in the Amakusa region, approximately 300-400 km long and 100 km wide. The extension resulted in crustal strain with a southwestward increasing trend, attributed to the increasing stress magnitude toward the Okinawa Trough.
The overriding lithosphere is occasionally stretched parallel to the consuming plate boundary. Such arc-parallel extension manifests itself mostly in forearc regions. Here, we report unique arc-parallel extension, which affected only the backarc regions with arc-parallel strain and stress gradients. The extension took place in the backarc regions of the northern Ryukyu and western SW Japan arcs in the Middle Miocene. The extension was evidenced by NW-SE trending normal faults in the extensional zone and paleostresses that were determined from dike orientations. To determine the age of and spatial extent of this zone, we analyzed fault-slip data from the Amakusa region, northern Ryukyu arc, where early middle Miocene intrusions allowed us to judge the magmatism to be older than the faults that affected Cretaceous and Eocene formations. The slip senses of the faults have been controversial in Amakusa. As a result, the region was found to have belonged to the extensional zone. The extensional zone is 300-400 km long and similar to 100 km wide. We also found that the arc-parallel extension resulted in crustal strain with a southwestward increasing trend along the zone. The strain magnitudes showed a negative correlation with distance from the Okinawa Trough. This correlation is explained by the increasing stress magnitude toward the trough. We suggest that the stalled rift propagation of the northern Okinawa Trough caused the unique arc-parallel extension in the Middle Miocene.

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