Publication Date:
2017-11-07
Description:
Vertical velocities obtained from uplifted river terrace dating near mountain fronts are commonly converted into overthrusting slip rates assuming simple geometry of the fault at depth. However, the lack of information on the dip angle of these shallow structures can lead to misinterpretation in the accommodation of convergence, and thus to erroneous conclusions on the transfer of shortening to the emergent thrust faults. Here, to assess the impact of fault geometry, we focus on the eastern Himalayan region in the south Central Bhutan, where the topographic frontal thrust (TFT) has been already documented by GPS, paleoseismic, geomorphic and geological studies. The present study is based on high-resolution near-surface geophysical investigations, including electrical resistivity, seismic and gravity measurements. Using a similar stochastic inversion approach for all data-sets, new quantitative constraints on both fault geometry and petrophysical parameters are obtained to image shallow depths, in the upper ca. 80 meters. The combined results from both surface observations and geophysical measurement provide a TFT geometry that is dipping northward with a shallow angle at the top (0–5 m), steeply dipping in the middle (5–40 m) and flattening at deeper depths ( 〉 40 m). Together, our new constraints on the fault geometry allow us to estimate a minimum overthrusting slip rate of 10 ± 2 mm/yr, which is only a part of the ca. 17 mm/yr GPS convergence. This suggests that, in the study area, significant deformation partitioning on several faults including TFT and the Main Boundary Thrust cannot be ruled out. More importantly, assuming constant slip rate, the obtained dip angle variations lead to uplift rate changes with distance to the TFT. This underlines that taking into account uplift rate from terrace dating only at the front location and assuming a constant dip angle fault geometry based on surface observations may significantly bias the slip rate estimates.
Print ISSN:
0956-540X
Electronic ISSN:
1365-246X
Topics:
Geosciences
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