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Structural origin of Lake Singkarak in central Sumatra

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Abstract

Since long it has been accepted that Lake Singkarak in Central Sumatra is nothing else but a remnant of a gigantic volcano — the Singkarak volcano — which once blew off its top to form a lake. Van Bemmelen, though not referring to Singkarak lake especially, explained the numerous depressions in Sumatra as the combined result of volcanic and tectonic activities, a phenomenon he called volcano-tectonic process which caused the formation of the socalled volcano-tectonic depressions.

A short visit to the lake area in the months of February and March (1970) convinced the author that Lake Singkarak is neither a volcanic ruin nor a volcano-tectonic depression in the sense of van Bemmelen.

Faulting evidences, morphology and the position of the Singkarak trough plus the distribution of volcanic products north and south of the lake led to the conclusion that the Singkarak trough is a depression making part of the 1650 km graben zone which stretches from Sumatra’s northern tip untill the Semangko valley in the SE. Field evidences suggest that the lake results from a damming process by volcanic material produced by the Marapi-Singgalang-Tandikat volcanoes in the north and by the products from the Talang volcano in the south.

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Zen, M.T. Structural origin of Lake Singkarak in central Sumatra. Bull Volcanol 35, 453–461 (1971). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02596966

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