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Relative Uplift Rates Along the Central Mindoro...
Journal article

Relative Uplift Rates Along the Central Mindoro Fault, Philippines

Abstract

The Central Mindoro Fault (CMF) is a major active oblique, sinistral strike-slip fault within the Philippine archipelago that accommodates the oblique convergence between the Philippine Sea Plate (PSP) and the Sunda Plate (SP). This study focused on assessing the spatial distribution of relative uplift rates along the CMF by calculating multiple geomorphic indices (elongation ratio, volume-to-area-ratio, valley floor width-to-height ratio, hypsometric integral, and normalized steepness index) and interpreting these values in the context of any along-strike variations in geology and climate, as well as the context of the CMF’s kinematics. We observed 2 characteristics of spatial distributions of relative uplift rates: (1) at least 20–30 km-long high uplift rate sections in the northwestern end of the CMF-bound mountain range (CMF segment I), and (2) at most, CMF-wide moderate to high uplift rates. This trend matches the geomorphic-based cumulative fault offset measurements distribution, possibly indicating consistent kinematics and an overall nearly-uniform stress-field since at least the Pleistocene. Based on the spatial distribution of areas with high relative uplift rates highlighted by this study, future efforts to assess the CMF’s seismogenic capability should focus on segments I and III.

Authors

Rimando J; Rimando R

Journal

GeoHazards, Vol. 6, No. 3,

Publisher

MDPI

Publication Date

September 1, 2025

DOI

10.3390/geohazards6030057

ISSN

2624-795X

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