Earth Science Seminar: "nBOSS Network: Imaging post-subduction processes beneath North Borneo"

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Earth Science Seminar: "nBOSS Network: Imaging post-subduction processes beneath North Borneo"
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This is a past event

Please join us for an Earth Science Seminar presented by Dr Amy Gilligan on "nBOSS Network: Imaging post-subduction processes beneath North Borneo". The seminar will take place on 24th January, 13:00 in Meston Lecture Theatre 2. All are welcome to attend.

Abstract

At present the mechanisms driving the processes that occur in post-subduction environments - magmatism, exhumation, rapid uplift, and subsidence - remain poorly understood. The relationship between what is observed at the surface and what is happening deeper in the Earth is unclear. North Borneo provides a unique natural laboratory for investigating post-subduction processes. It was the site of two subduction systems during the last 65Ma: the subduction of the proto-South China Sea beneath what is now the NW continental margin of North Borneo, which terminated ~23Ma, and a later phase of northward subduction of the Celebes Sea plate, which terminated ~5-6Ma. During the post-subduction phase the western side of North Borneo has experienced mountain building, which formed the Crocker Range (~20Ma) and the 4100m high Mt. Kinabalu, a large granite pluton emplaced relatively rapidly between 7.9 and 7.2Ma.

While significant research has taken place to characterize the surface geology of North Borneo, the extent to which this has been shaped by post subduction tectonic processes remains unknown. Indeed, the processes that are occurring are contested: was the intrusion of the Mt Kinabalu granite and subsequent rapid uplift a result of gravitational collapse and extension or has mountain building occurred due to compressive stresses? If gravitational collapse is occurring, what are the causes of this: is it due to slab break off, lithospheric delamination during mountain building, or gravitational instability resulting in a lithospheric drip?

To address these questions, a new network of 46 broadband seismometers was deployed in March 2018 in a 40km by 40km grid across the Malaysian state of Sabah, as part of the North Borneo Orogeny Seismic Survey (nBOSS). This is a joint project between the University of Aberdeen, the University of Cambridge and Universiti Malaysia Sabah.  The network is deployed in schools, homes, plantations, and conservation areas, and includes one instrument high on Mt Kinabalu. Our network is complemented by data from 24 seismometers operated the Malaysian Metrological Service, many of which are located close to Mt Kinabalu. Such coverage by seismic instrumentation is unprecedented in this region, thus we will be able to provide the first high-resolution constraints on the structure of the crust and mantle in this post-subduction setting. This presentation will discuss the installation of the nBOSS network and present some of the first results to constrain crustal structure in North Borneo using seismic imaging techniques. 

Speaker
Dr Amy Gilligan
Venue
Meston Lecture Theatre 2