Title
Sedimentation in western pacific backarc basins: New insights from recent ODP drilling
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
1-1-1995
Abstract
© 1995 by the American Geophysical Union. During the most recent phase of ocean drilling in the western Pacific, a series of Ocean Drilling Program (ODP) legs explored the history of sedimentation within several types of backarc basins: a nascent intraoceanic backarc basin (Sumisu Rift, leg 126), a young intraoceanic backarc basin (Lau Basin, leg 13S), a continental margin backarc basin (Japan Sea, legs 127 and 128), and marginal basins of uncertain origin (e.g., Sulu Sea, leg 124). The Sumisu Rift is a nascent backarc basin characterized by high sediment accumulation rates (≥4 km/yr.) and thick, coarse pumiceous units derived from periodic eruptions of nearby arc calderas and deposited by turbidity-current and mass-flow processes. The mixed volcanic provenance of the Sumisu basin fill can be attributed to syneruptive mixing or mixing during transport into the basin. Sites drilled in a series of sub-basins in the Lau backarc region show similar upward-fining sequences with basal coarse-grained, proximal deposits (volcanic sands and gravels that grade upward into nannofossil-ooze dominated sections with rare air-fall ash beds. The proximal facies record an apparent eastward shift in volcanism across the basin during the Plio-Pleistocene. Geochemical analyses of pyroclastic debris within the coarse basal sections are consistent with local intrabasinal volcanic sources. Lower Miocene volcaniclastic sections recovered in the Sulu Basin support a backarc origin for this basin. These deposits represent the basinal portion of an arc-derived volcaniclastic apron that prograded basinward soon after formation of the underlying backarc-basin crust. Subsequent influx of continental elastics into the Sulu Basin during the middle to late Miocene is attributed to a sea-level lowstand. The Japan Sea is a continental backarc basin that contains Quaternary to Miocene sand with both magmatic-arc and continental provenance. Diagenetic modification of more-deeply buried Miocene sandstones has resulted in some loss of provenance information.
Publication Source (Journal or Book title)
Geophysical Monograph Series
First Page
291
Last Page
314
Recommended Citation
Marsaglia, K., Boggs, S., Clift, P., Seyedolali, A., & Smith, R. (1995). Sedimentation in western pacific backarc basins: New insights from recent ODP drilling. Geophysical Monograph Series, 88, 291-314. https://doi.org/10.1029/GM088p0291