Escape tectonism in the Gulf of Thailand: Paleogene left-lateral pull-apart rifting in the Vietnamese part of the Malay Basin

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

Escape tectonism in the Gulf of Thailand: Paleogene left-lateral pull-apart rifting in the Vietnamese part of the Malay Basin. / Fyhn, Michael B.W.; Boldreel, Lars Ole; Nielsen, Lars H.

In: Tectonophysics, Vol. 483, No. 3-4, 2010, p. 365-376.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Fyhn, MBW, Boldreel, LO & Nielsen, LH 2010, 'Escape tectonism in the Gulf of Thailand: Paleogene left-lateral pull-apart rifting in the Vietnamese part of the Malay Basin', Tectonophysics, vol. 483, no. 3-4, pp. 365-376. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tecto.2009.11.004

APA

Fyhn, M. B. W., Boldreel, L. O., & Nielsen, L. H. (2010). Escape tectonism in the Gulf of Thailand: Paleogene left-lateral pull-apart rifting in the Vietnamese part of the Malay Basin. Tectonophysics, 483(3-4), 365-376. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tecto.2009.11.004

Vancouver

Fyhn MBW, Boldreel LO, Nielsen LH. Escape tectonism in the Gulf of Thailand: Paleogene left-lateral pull-apart rifting in the Vietnamese part of the Malay Basin. Tectonophysics. 2010;483(3-4):365-376. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tecto.2009.11.004

Author

Fyhn, Michael B.W. ; Boldreel, Lars Ole ; Nielsen, Lars H. / Escape tectonism in the Gulf of Thailand: Paleogene left-lateral pull-apart rifting in the Vietnamese part of the Malay Basin. In: Tectonophysics. 2010 ; Vol. 483, No. 3-4. pp. 365-376.

Bibtex

@article{bffc56c0f0fa11dfb6d2000ea68e967b,
title = "Escape tectonism in the Gulf of Thailand: Paleogene left-lateral pull-apart rifting in the Vietnamese part of the Malay Basin",
abstract = "The Malay Basin represents one of the largest rift basins of SE Asia. Based on a comprehensive 2-D seismic database tied to wells covering mainly Vietnamese acreage, the evolution of the Vietnamese part of the basin is outlined and a new tectonic model is proposed for the development of the basin. The Vietnamese part of the Malay Basin comprises a large and deep Paleogene pull-apart basin formed through Middle or Late Eocene to Oligocene left-lateral strike-slip along NNW-trending fault zones. The Tho Chu Fault Zone constitutes a significant Paleogene left-lateral strike-slip zone most likely associated with SE Asian extrusion tectonism. The fault zone outlines a deep rift that widens to the south and connects with the main Malay Basin. In the central northern part of the basin, a series of intra-basinal left-lateral fracture zones are interconnected by NW toWNW-trending extensional faults and worked to distribute sinistral shearing cross the width of the basin. Extensive thermal sagging throughout the Neogene has led to the accommodation of a very thick sedimentary succession. Moderate rifting resumed during the Early Miocene following older structural fabric. The intensity of rifting increases towards the west and was probably related to coeval extension in the western part of the Gulf of Thailand. Neogene extension culminated before the Pliocene, although faults in places remains active. Late Neogene basin inversion has been attributed to c. 70 km of right-lateral movement across major c. N–Strendingfaults in the central part of the basin. However, the lack of inversion in Vietnamese territory onlyseems to merit a few kilometers of dextral inversion.",
author = "Fyhn, {Michael B.W.} and Boldreel, {Lars Ole} and Nielsen, {Lars H}",
year = "2010",
doi = "10.1016/j.tecto.2009.11.004",
language = "English",
volume = "483",
pages = "365--376",
journal = "Tectonophysics",
issn = "0040-1951",
publisher = "Elsevier",
number = "3-4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Escape tectonism in the Gulf of Thailand: Paleogene left-lateral pull-apart rifting in the Vietnamese part of the Malay Basin

AU - Fyhn, Michael B.W.

AU - Boldreel, Lars Ole

AU - Nielsen, Lars H

PY - 2010

Y1 - 2010

N2 - The Malay Basin represents one of the largest rift basins of SE Asia. Based on a comprehensive 2-D seismic database tied to wells covering mainly Vietnamese acreage, the evolution of the Vietnamese part of the basin is outlined and a new tectonic model is proposed for the development of the basin. The Vietnamese part of the Malay Basin comprises a large and deep Paleogene pull-apart basin formed through Middle or Late Eocene to Oligocene left-lateral strike-slip along NNW-trending fault zones. The Tho Chu Fault Zone constitutes a significant Paleogene left-lateral strike-slip zone most likely associated with SE Asian extrusion tectonism. The fault zone outlines a deep rift that widens to the south and connects with the main Malay Basin. In the central northern part of the basin, a series of intra-basinal left-lateral fracture zones are interconnected by NW toWNW-trending extensional faults and worked to distribute sinistral shearing cross the width of the basin. Extensive thermal sagging throughout the Neogene has led to the accommodation of a very thick sedimentary succession. Moderate rifting resumed during the Early Miocene following older structural fabric. The intensity of rifting increases towards the west and was probably related to coeval extension in the western part of the Gulf of Thailand. Neogene extension culminated before the Pliocene, although faults in places remains active. Late Neogene basin inversion has been attributed to c. 70 km of right-lateral movement across major c. N–Strendingfaults in the central part of the basin. However, the lack of inversion in Vietnamese territory onlyseems to merit a few kilometers of dextral inversion.

AB - The Malay Basin represents one of the largest rift basins of SE Asia. Based on a comprehensive 2-D seismic database tied to wells covering mainly Vietnamese acreage, the evolution of the Vietnamese part of the basin is outlined and a new tectonic model is proposed for the development of the basin. The Vietnamese part of the Malay Basin comprises a large and deep Paleogene pull-apart basin formed through Middle or Late Eocene to Oligocene left-lateral strike-slip along NNW-trending fault zones. The Tho Chu Fault Zone constitutes a significant Paleogene left-lateral strike-slip zone most likely associated with SE Asian extrusion tectonism. The fault zone outlines a deep rift that widens to the south and connects with the main Malay Basin. In the central northern part of the basin, a series of intra-basinal left-lateral fracture zones are interconnected by NW toWNW-trending extensional faults and worked to distribute sinistral shearing cross the width of the basin. Extensive thermal sagging throughout the Neogene has led to the accommodation of a very thick sedimentary succession. Moderate rifting resumed during the Early Miocene following older structural fabric. The intensity of rifting increases towards the west and was probably related to coeval extension in the western part of the Gulf of Thailand. Neogene extension culminated before the Pliocene, although faults in places remains active. Late Neogene basin inversion has been attributed to c. 70 km of right-lateral movement across major c. N–Strendingfaults in the central part of the basin. However, the lack of inversion in Vietnamese territory onlyseems to merit a few kilometers of dextral inversion.

U2 - 10.1016/j.tecto.2009.11.004

DO - 10.1016/j.tecto.2009.11.004

M3 - Journal article

VL - 483

SP - 365

EP - 376

JO - Tectonophysics

JF - Tectonophysics

SN - 0040-1951

IS - 3-4

ER -

ID: 23161089