Arc-Continent Collision in the Banda Arc: New Gravity Observations Integrated with Geological and Geophysical Data
 
    
    - Organization:
- The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
- Pages:
- 4
- File Size:
- 682 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1987
Abstract
The Banda arc, a U-shaped orogenic belt which separates  oceanic crust of the Banda Sea from continental crust underlying the  Australian- New Guinea shelf, has been interpreted to mark the  convergent boundary between the northward-moving Indian Ocean- Australian plate and the Southeast Asian plate (Hamilton, 1979; von  der Borch, 1979; Bowin et al., 1980). East of the island of Sumba  (Fig. 1), the oceanic crust of the Indian Ocean has been completely  subducted and Australian crust is now thrust under the Banda arc.  Controversy has centered over the interpretation of the Timor trough  as the surface location of subduction and the significance of the Savu  Sea between Timor and Flores as either a forearc basin or the  continuation of the Java trench (Karig et al., 1987). Two concentric  island ridges, called the inner and outer Banda arcs (Hamilton, 1979),  separate Australian continental crust from the oceanic crust of the  Banda Sea (von der Borch, 1979) (Fig. 1). The inner arc is a typical  volcanic island arc composed of calc-alkalic volcanic rocks of Neogene  age, while older (Permian and younger) complexly deformed  sedimentary and metamorphic rocks make up the outer arc. Timor is  the largest and most extensively studied island of the outer arc and is  separated from the inner arc by the Savu Sea. The triangular-shaped  Savu Sea appears to be a complex forearc basin divided by a series of  buried basement ridges (Karig et al., 1987). The outer, convex side of  the Banda arc is followed by a major negative bathymetric feature  known ne rho Timor trnnnh
Citation
APA: (1987) Arc-Continent Collision in the Banda Arc: New Gravity Observations Integrated with Geological and Geophysical Data
MLA: Arc-Continent Collision in the Banda Arc: New Gravity Observations Integrated with Geological and Geophysical Data. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 1987.
