The document summarizes the geology of the forearc region between Java and Sumatra. It is formed by the convergence of the Indo-Australian and Asian tectonic plates from the middle Eocene to late Oligocene. The forearc consists of accreted prisms and basins that record this tectonic history. The geological structures in the basins include strike-slip faults in Sumatra and oblique convergence zones, as well as thrust faults and extensional faults that become more dominant further south near the accretionary zone. Stratigraphy shows evidence of deltaic deposition, followed by marine and fluvial sediments as plate convergence changed the depositional environments over time.
The document summarizes the geology of the forearc region between Java and Sumatra. It is formed by the convergence of the Indo-Australian and Asian tectonic plates from the middle Eocene to late Oligocene. The forearc consists of accreted prisms and basins that record this tectonic history. The geological structures in the basins include strike-slip faults in Sumatra and oblique convergence zones, as well as thrust faults and extensional faults that become more dominant further south near the accretionary zone. Stratigraphy shows evidence of deltaic deposition, followed by marine and fluvial sediments as plate convergence changed the depositional environments over time.
southwest of Sumatra to the northeast of java, consisting of various Prism accretions and basins (Fig.1). Geological conditions of Fore-arc Java-Sumatra we can mirror the geological structure and stratigraphy of the basins the area thrive on. Fore-arc Java-Sumatra formed by convergence of the IndoAustralian plate and the Asian Plate during the middle Eocene to late Oligocene, followed by the latest charging transgressive marine and open sediments on the Fore-arc east java and Fluvial-lacustrine sediments developed in NW Java and Sumatra. Geological conditions of Fore-arc in western Indonesia recorded from Aceh basin, with a long (> 200 km) and narrow (< 50 km). Bounded by the West Andaman Fault, a trench-linked strike-slip fault obliquely crossing the northward extension of the Great Sumatran Fault. Research from Atsushi using the seismic method mention that the deposits in the basin are thickest along the boundary fault between the basin and the Outer-arc high, and gradually thin with increasing distance from the faults. And then followed by The Simeulue Basin extends over 260 km in NW-SE direction and 100 km in SW-NE direction, part of a classic example of subduction, Convergence system along the Sunda Arc becomes increasingly oblique from south to north resulting in large-scale, dextral strike-slip fault systems within the fore-arc basins and on Sumatra (Malod and Kemal, 1996; Sieh and Natawidjaja, 2000). The geological conditions of the next West of Fore-arc Java-Sumatra basin can be learned from Nias, Mentawai and Southwest Java. Nias and Mentawai basins accordance in the deliberations of the Matson and Moore (1992) with primarily concerned to seismic stratigraphy and not
with geology structure discusses about important
roles to the Batee Fault, a featured primarily defined by mapping on the Sumatra mainland, and to a flexure, which can be identified with the Mentawai fault zone which marks the rear margin of the trenchslope break. Due to the geological structure of the Mentawai Islands were quite significantly shows that the marine Oligocene graben fill (Fig.2) at that basin. Basin Southwest of Java had a complicated post-rift Neogene tectonic history, resulting in the Eocene Bayah formation and the Eocene Ciletuh formation, with features of deltaic deposits indicates basin development of syn-rift stage of fore-arc.
Figure 1. Tectonic setting of Sumatra Darman and
Sidi (2000) modification
Figure 2. Sedimentary basins of Sumatra
Awang Harun Satyana modification
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The South Java Fore-arc Basin consist of South
Java which lie between the volcano-plutonic arc and the arc accretion wedge of the trench system. According to Dickinson and Seely (1979), the Java Forearc basin from the residual as a Fore-arc (lying on oceanic crust trapped between the arc massif and the subduction zone) and developed as a constructed basin (lying on a structural join between the arc massif and the accretionary wedge). In contrast to Fore-arc of Sumatra which is identical with right lateral strike-slip faults, Java Fore-arc doesn't really have a shear zones that are so significant, folds and thrusts (Fig.4) occur seaward side of the basin. A Prominent structural high separates the present Forearc basin from the arc massif characterized by block faulting. There may be differences in stratigraphy and geologic structure between Fore-arc Southeast Java and Central-Southwest Fore-arc basins, on these basins characterize that increasingly in the direction of South or accretionary zone indicates that the thrust fault zone became more dominant, on the other way extensional faults (Fig.3) looks more dominant towards the Fore-arc basin and volcanic arc. Stratigraphy in the Fore-arc basin characterizes that volcanic activity quite significant, on the order of stratigraphy is characterized by deposits of volcanic that dominates in the Oligocene and continued with epiclastic back again with volcanic deposits and followed by Fore-arc slope-Submarine canyons.
Figure 3. Approximately N-S and E-W seismic line
across the East Java Forearc M. Surya Nugraha and Robert Hall modification
Figure 4. Geoseismic Cross
Section Fore-arc Central Java Pertamina modification
Geological conditions of Fore-arc Java-Sumatra have
different traits in each part, in accordance with the evolution of the tectonic and sedimentary sources of roles are evolving in each area. Similarly with Geological structure characteristics, lateral strikeslip faults are more dominant in the Fore-arc of Sumatra-Southwest Java, on the other way dip-slip faults are more dominant in the Fore-arc Central java to Fore-arc Southeast Java. Page 2