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Benoît Deffontaines

Bio: Benoît Deffontaines is an academic researcher from University of Paris. The author has contributed to research in topics: Tectonics & Subduction. The author has an hindex of 27, co-authored 84 publications receiving 2384 citations. Previous affiliations of Benoît Deffontaines include European Space Agency & École Normale Supérieure.


Papers
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Book ChapterDOI
01 Jan 2002
TL;DR: Marine observations offshore of Taiwan indicate intense deformation of the Luzon arc-forearc complex, with episodic eastward migration of the active deformation front across the complex as mentioned in this paper.
Abstract: Marine observations offshore of Taiwan indicate intense deformation of the Luzon arc-forearc complex, with episodic eastward migration of the active deformation front across the complex. The Philippine Sea Plate (PHS) began colliding with the Eurasian continental margin in Pliocene time. Because of the obliquity of plate convergence, the collision has propagated through time from north of Taiwan to the south with the more advanced stages being presently observed to the north, whereas the subduction of the oceanic lithosphere of the South China Sea beneath the PHS occurs to the south. Offshore, the collision zone is characterized by deformation of the arc including the forearc region to the south. This active tectonic domain absorbs a significant amount of shortening between the Eurasia margin and the PHS, which is moving towards N 310° E at about 8 cm/yr relative to Eurasia. Swath bathymetry and backscattering data, together with seismic reflection and geopotential data obtained during the ACT cruise onboard the R/V L'Atalante, showed major north to south changes in the tectonic style in both the indenting arc and the host margin. In the southern domain, left-lateral transpression is recorded by deformed and folded series of the forearc domain that are unconformably overlain by collision-derived sediments of the Southern Longitudinal Trough (SLT). Today, the loci of deformation has jumped to the east and it is characterized by the growth of a sedimentary ridge (the Huatung ridge, rear portion of the former Manila oceanic accretionary wedge including forearc and intra-arc sequences), which overthrusts the basement of the island arc. In the northern domain, north of 22°30'N, active westward thrusting of the Coastal Range (remnants of the island arc and forearc basins) over the Lichi melange develops onland along the Longitudinal Valley. Offshore, at the base of the eastern slope, prominent fault scarps suggest an active eastward thrusting of parts of the arc (volcanic edifices and intra-arc or forearc sediments) onto the oceanic crust of the Philippine Sea Plate. It accounts today for part of the convergence. The

181 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors mapped the Tsaoling landslide area and estimated the landslide volume, using a high-resolution digital elevation model from airborne LiDAR (Light Detection And Ranging), aerial photographs and topographic maps.

148 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a multisource and multiscale approach to study of the continental collision setting has been undertaken to combine tectonics, sedimentology and geomorphology, which provides significant information on the processes that govern lateral propagation of an active anticline.

131 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the influence of basin and block tectonics is revealed in the context of major Late Proterozoic shear faults which have been rejuvenated up to the present day.

121 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, structural, geodetic and seismological data in SW Taiwan are analyzed and discussed in terms of present-day tectonic escape occurring in response to the active N100° collisional shortening.

114 citations


Cited by
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, a model for the Cenozoic development of the region of SE Asia and the SW Pacific is presented and its implications are discussed, accompanied by computer animations in a variety of formats.

2,272 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors outline the principles for landslide mapping, and review the conventional methods for the preparation of landslide maps, including geomorphological, event, seasonal, and multi-temporal inventories.

1,290 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, geochemical data for Pleistocene magmatic rocks from the Surigao peninsula, eastern Mindanao, the Philippines, demonstrate typical adakitic traits, including elevation of Sr/Y and depletion of the heavy rare earth elements.

911 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Camiguin is a small volcanic island located 12 km north of Mindanao Island in southern Philippines as mentioned in this paper, which is the most likely source of Camiguin and most CMA magmas is the mantle wedge metasomatized by fluids dehydrated from a subducted slab.
Abstract: Camiguin is a small volcanic island located 12 km north of Mindanao Island in southern Philippines. The island consists of four volcanic centers which have erupted basaltic to rhyolitic calcalkaline lavas during the last ∼400 ka. Major element, trace element and Sr, Nd and Pb isotopic data indicate that the volcanic centers have produced a single lava series from a common mantle source. Modeling results indicate that Camiguin lavas were produced by periodic injection of a parental magma into shallow magma chambers allowing assimilation and fractional crystallization (AFC) processes to take place. The chemical and isotopic composition of Camiguin lavas bears strong resemblance to the majority of lavas from the central Mindanao volcanic field confirming that Camiguin is an extension of the tectonically complex Central Mindanao Arc (CMA). The most likely source of Camiguin and most CMA magmas is the mantle wedge metasomatized by fluids dehydrated from a subducted slab. Some Camiguin high-silica lavas are similar to high-silica lavas from Mindanao, which have been identified as “adakites” derived from direct melting of a subducted basaltic crust. More detailed comparison of Camiguin and Mindanao adakites with silicic slab-derived melts and magnesian andesites from the western Aleutians, southernmost Chile and Batan Island in northern Philippines indicates that the Mindanao adakites are not pure slab melts. Rather, the CMA adakites are similar to Camiguin high-silica lavas which are products of an AFC process and have negligible connection to melting of subducted basaltic crust.

881 citations

Proceedings Article
01 Jan 1998
TL;DR: In this article, the role of polarimetry in synthetic aperture radar (SAR) interferometry is examined and a coherent decomposition for polarimetric SAR inter-ferometry that allows the separation of the effective phase centers of different scattering mechanisms is introduced.
Abstract: In this paper, we examine the role of polarimetry in synthetic aperture radar (SAR) interferometry. We first propose a general formulation for vector wave interferometry that includes conventional scalar interferometry as a special case. Then, we show how polarimetric basis transformations can be introduced into SAR interferometry and applied to form interferograms between all possible linear combinations of polarization states. This allows us to reveal the strong polarization dependency of the interferometric coherence. We then solve the coherence optimization problem involving maximization of interferometric coherence and formulate a new coherent decomposition for polarimetric SAR interferometry that allows the separation of the effective phase centers of different scattering mechanisms. A simplified stochastic scattering model for an elevated forest canopy is introduced to demonstrate the effectiveness of the proposed algorithms. In this way, we demonstrate the importance of wave polarization for the physical interpretation of SAR interferograms. We investigate the potential of polarimetric SAR interferometry using results from the evaluation of fully polarimetric interferometric shuttle imaging radar (SIR)-C/X-SAR data collected during October 8-9, 1994, over the SE Baikal Lake Selenga delta region of Buriatia, Southeast Siberia, Russia.

794 citations