World’s largest exposed fault covers area twice the size of Belgium
By Robin Andrews From IFL SCIENCE
Known as the Banda Detachment Fault (BDF), this tectonic scar in Indonesia is around 450 kilometers (280 miles) long, and has now been carefully mapped by using high-resolution maps of the seafloor. During its formation, it pulled apart an area of over 60,000 square kilometers (23,170 square miles). “Colossal” doesn’t do this enormous maw justice.
The very deepest are ocean trenches, created when a denser oceanic plate collapses beneath a continental plate during a process known as “subduction”. The Pacific Ocean’s Mariana Trench, 10,994 meters (36,070 feet) beneath the surface, is the current record holder.
Forearc basins are their little siblings, generated closer to land, nearer the terrestrial volcanoes that form above subduction zones. The Weber Deep scar, 7.2 kilometers (4.5 miles) below sea level, is the world’s deepest forearc basin, concealed within the extremely warped Banda arc of eastern Indonesia.
Until now, no one knew how it penetrated so far down into the continental crust. Analyzing individual, smaller fault scars within the BDF, the researchers from ANU now think they know the answer.
The BDF represents a vast wound, one that required a piece of crust twice the size of Belgium to have been fractured and stretched across a width of 120 kilometers (75 miles). Tectonic forces caused the rims to flex dramatically upwards and push the central region downwards below the waves.
“This demonstrates the extreme amount of extension that must have taken place,” Pownall added.
Make no mistake, tectonic forces are like none other. Another study recently revealed that the collision of India and Eurasia, not content with creating the Himalayas, alsodestroyed an entire continent in the process, forcing it down into the mantle.
IMAGES:
Image in text: The location of the Banda Sea in Southeast Asia, and roughly the location of the Weber Deep. M. Minderhoud/Wikimedia Commons; Public Domain
The complex geology of the Weber Deep. ANU
Gunung APL A Volcano in the Banda islands of Indonesia Javarman/ Shutterstock
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