The onset of movement on
the Philippine Fault in Eastern Mindanao: A transition from a collision to a
strike slip environment
Ramon D. Quebral
Mines & Geosciences
Bureau, North Ave., Diliman, Quezon City, Philippines; (2)
Manuel Pubellier, Claude Rangin
CNRS URA 1759 Dept. de Géotectonique, Université P et M.
Curie, 4 Place Jussieu T26-0, 1st fl., 75252 Paris, France
Abstract. The
spatial and temporal evolution of eastern Mindanao from a zone of active
arc-arc collision to one of pure strike slip environment is addressed. This is
made possible by tracing the Philippine Fault, confined to a well defined and
narrow zone of deformation, and by differentiating from it earlier
collision-related compressional features, whose deformation is distributed over
a broad zone. A diachronous unconformity marking the end of collision-related
deformation reflects the southward propagating nature of the collision and
provides limits on the age of initiation of the Philippine Fault. This
diachronism suggests that the initiation of the Philippine Fault is related to
the completion of the collision. We show the rapidity at which formation and
propagation of the fault follows the locking of the collision zone. We likewise
demonstrate that the Philippine Fault reactivates pre-existing collisional
features in cutting across the southern Pacific Cordillera.