The left-lateral strike-slip Central Sulawesi Fault System (CSFS, composed of the NNW Palu-Koro (PKF) and the ESE Matano faults) is located within the eastern Indonesian triple junction between the Pacific, Indo-Australian and Eurasian plates. Fault kinematic and fission-track analyses show that the Late Cenozoic central Sulawesi deformation results from three Successive tectonic regimes: (1) A Late Miocene-early Pliocene (5 Ma) WNW-trending shortening characterized by transpressional deformation along the PKF and compressional in the Poso area. This tectonics resulted from the collision between the Banggai-Sula block with Sulawesi. It produced locally a transpressional regime as a consequence of the northward extrusion of the Central Sulawesi block limited by the PKF. (2) A Pliocene collapse tectonic regime associated with W-trending extension. Coeval with these events regional cooling and exhumation took place. (3) A Quaternary transtensional regime resulting from the combined effects of the Central Sulawesi block northward motion, and extension related to back-arc spreading behind the North Sulawesi subduction (Tomini Gulf). (c) 2005 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
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