Tectonic Evolution and Key Geological Issues of the Proto-South China Sea

被引:11
|
作者
Tian Zhiwen [1 ,2 ]
Tang Wu [3 ]
Wang Pujun [1 ,2 ]
Zhao Zhigang [3 ]
Sun Xiaomeng [1 ,2 ]
Tang Huafeng [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Minist Land & Resources, Key Lab Mineral Resources Evaluat Northeast Asia, Changchun 130061, Peoples R China
[2] Jilin Univ, Coll Earth Sci, Changchun 130061, Peoples R China
[3] CWOOC Res Inst Co Ltd, Beijing 100028, Peoples R China
基金
中国国家自然科学基金;
关键词
tectonic evolution; paleogeographic location; new oceanic crust; Proto‐ South China Sea;
D O I
10.1111/1755-6724.14644
中图分类号
P [天文学、地球科学];
学科分类号
07 ;
摘要
There are numerous controversies surrounding the tectonic properties and evolution of the Proto-South China Sea (PSCS). By combining data from previously published works with our geological and paleontological observations of the South China Sea (SCS), we propose that the PSCS should be analyzed within two separate contexts: its paleogeographic location and the history of its oceanic crust. With respect to its paleogeographic location, the tectonic properties of the PSCS vary widely from the Triassic to the mid-Late Cretaceous. In the Triassic, the Paleo-Tethys and the Paleo-Pacific Oceans were the major causes of tectonic changes in the SCS, while the PCSC may have been a remnant sea residing upon Tethys or Paleo-Pacific oceanic crust. In the Jurassic, the Meso-Tethys and the Paleo-Pacific oceans joined, creating a PSCS back-arc basin consisting of Meso-Tethys and/or Paleo-Pacific oceanic crust. From the Early Cretaceous to the mid-Late Cretaceous, the Paleo-Pacific Ocean was the main tectonic body affecting the SCS; the PSCS may have been a marginal sea or a back-arc basin with Paleo-Pacific oceanic crust. With respect to its oceanic crust, due to the subduction and retreat of the Paleo-Pacific plate in Southeast Asia at the end of the Late Cretaceous, the SCS probably produced new oceanic crust, which allowed the PSCS to formally emerge. At this time, the PSCS was most likely a combination of a new marginal sea and a remnant sea; its oceanic crust, which eventually subducted and became extinct, consisted of both new oceanic crust and remnant oceanic crust from the Paleo-Pacific Ocean. In the present day, the remnant PSCS oceanic crust is located in the southwestern Nansha Trough.
引用
收藏
页码:77 / 90
页数:14
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Tectonic Evolution of the Wanan Basin,Southwestern South China Sea
    Lü Caili
    ZHANG Gongcheng
    YAO Yongjian
    WU Shiguo
    Acta Geologica Sinica(English Edition), 2014, (04) : 1120 - 1130
  • [22] Tectonic Evolution of the Wanan Basin,Southwestern South China Sea
    L Caili
    ZHANG Gongcheng
    YAO Yongjian
    WU Shiguo
    Acta Geologica Sinica(English Edition), 2014, 88 (04) : 1120 - 1130
  • [23] Subduction Processes of the Proto-South China Sea: Evidence from the Late Cretaceous-Oligocene Stratigraphic Record in Borneo
    Zhu Z.
    Yan Y.
    Zhao Q.
    Geotectonica et Metallogenia, 2022, 46 (03) : 552 - 568
  • [24] CHARACTERISTICS OF MAGNETIC LINEATIONS AND TECTONIC EVOLUTION OF THE SOUTH CHINA SEA BASIN
    吕文正
    柯长志
    吴声迪
    刘建华
    林长松
    ActaOceanologicaSinica, 1987, (04) : 577 - 588
  • [25] Thermal modeling of the tectonic evolution of the southwest subbasin in the South China Sea
    Zhang, J
    Song, HB
    Li, JB
    CHINESE JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICS-CHINESE EDITION, 2005, 48 (06): : 1357 - 1365
  • [26] Tectonic evolution of the Northeastern South China Sea from seismic interpretation
    Yeh, Yi-Ching
    Sibuet, Jean-Claude
    Hsu, Shu-Kun
    Liu, Char-Shine
    JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-SOLID EARTH, 2010, 115
  • [27] The tectonic evolution of the Qiongdongnan Basin in the northern margin of the South China Sea
    Hu, Bo
    Wang, Liangshu
    Yan, Wenbo
    Liu, Shaowen
    Cai, Dongsheng
    Zhang, Gongcheng
    Zhong, Kai
    Pei, Jianxiang
    Sun, Bin
    JOURNAL OF ASIAN EARTH SCIENCES, 2013, 77 : 163 - 182
  • [28] Using satellite magnetic data to divide geological tectonic units of South China Sea
    ZHU Yixian
    LI Tonglin
    ZHANG Rongzhe
    SHI Huiyan
    CHEN Hanbo
    LI Gen
    Global Geology, 2018, 21 (03) : 186 - 193
  • [29] Geological evolution of the West Luzon Basin (South China Sea, Philippines)
    Arfai, Jashar
    Franke, Dieter
    Gaedicke, Christoph
    Lutz, Ruediger
    Schnabel, Michael
    Ladage, Stefan
    Berglar, Kai
    Aurelio, Mario
    Montano, Jennie
    Pellejera, Nicole
    MARINE GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH, 2011, 32 (03) : 349 - 362
  • [30] Geological evolution of the West Luzon Basin (South China Sea, Philippines)
    Jashar Arfai
    Dieter Franke
    Christoph Gaedicke
    Rüdiger Lutz
    Michael Schnabel
    Stefan Ladage
    Kai Berglar
    Mario Aurelio
    Jennie Montano
    Nicole Pellejera
    Marine Geophysical Research, 2011, 32 : 349 - 362