Authors

Chun Feng Li, Tongji University
Jiabiao Li, State Oceanic Administration China
Weiwei Ding, State Oceanic Administration China
Dieter Franke, Bundesanstalt für Geowissenschaften und Rohstoffe
Yongjian Yao, Guangzhou Marine Geological Survey
Hesheng Shi, China National Offshore Oil Corp
Xiong Pang, China National Offshore Oil Corp
Ying Cao, Tongji University
Jian Lin, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution
Denise K. Kulhanek, Texas A&M University
Trevor Williams, Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory
Rui Bao, ETH Zürich
Anne Briais, Université Fédérale Toulouse Midi-Pyrénées
Elizabeth A. Brown, University of South Florida St. Petersburg
Yifeng Chen, Guangzhou Institute of Geochemistry Chinese Academy of Sciences
Peter D. Clift, Louisiana State University
Frederick S. Colwell, Oregon State University
Kelsie A. Dadd, Macquarie University
Iván Hernández-Almeida, University of Bern
Xiao Long Huang, Guangzhou Institute of Geochemistry Chinese Academy of Sciences
Sangmin Hyun, Korea Institute Of Ocean Science & Technology
Tao Jiang, China University of Geosciences
Anthony A.P. Koppers, Oregon State University
Qianyu Li, Tongji University
Chuanlian Liu, Tongji University
Qingsong Liu, Chinese Academy of Sciences
Zhifei Liu, Tongji University
Renata H. Nagai, Universidade de Sao Paulo - USP
Alyssa Peleo-Alampay, University of the Philippines Diliman
Xin Su, China University of Geosciences, Beijing
Zhen Sun, South China Seas Institute of Oceanography Chinese Academy of Sciences
Maria Luisa G. Tejada, Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology
Hai Son Trinh, Ministry of Natural Resources and Environment, Vietnam

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

3-1-2015

Abstract

©2015. American Geophysical Union. All Rights Reserved. Coring/logging data and physical property measurements from International Ocean Discovery Program Expedition 349 are integrated with, and correlated to, reflection seismic data to map seismic sequence boundaries and facies of the central basin and neighboring regions of the South China Sea. First-order sequence boundaries are interpreted, which are Oligocene/Miocene, middle Miocene/late Miocene, Miocene/Pliocene, and Pliocene/Pleistocene boundaries. A characteristic early Pleistocene strong reflector is also identified, which marks the top of extensive carbonate-rich deposition in the southern East and Southwest Subbasins. The fossil spreading ridge and the boundary between the East and Southwest Subbasins acted as major sedimentary barriers, across which seismic facies changes sharply and cannot be easily correlated. The sharp seismic facies change along the Miocene-Pliocene boundary indicates that a dramatic regional tectonostratigraphic event occurred at about 5 Ma, coeval with the onsets of uplift of Taiwan and accelerated subsidence and transgression in the northern margin. The depocenter or the area of the highest sedimentation rate switched from the northern East Subbasin during the Miocene to the Southwest Subbasin and the area close to the fossil ridge in the southern East Subbasin in the Pleistocene. The most active faulting and vertical uplifting now occur in the southern East Subbasin, caused most likely by the active and fastest subduction/obduction in the southern segment of the Manila Trench and the collision between the northeast Palawan and the Luzon arc. Timing of magmatic intrusions and seamounts constrained by seismic stratigraphy in the central basin varies and does not show temporal pulsing in their activities.

Publication Source (Journal or Book title)

Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth

First Page

1377

Last Page

1399

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