Ages and magnetic structures of the South China Sea constrained by deep tow magnetic surveys and IODP Expedition 349
Ages and magnetic structures of the South China Sea constrained by deep tow magnetic surveys and IODP Expedition 349
Date
2014-12-27
Authors
Li, Chun-Feng
Xu, Xing
Lin, Jian
Sun, Zhen
Zhu, Jian
Yao, Yongjian
Zhao, Xixi
Liu, Qingsong
Kulhanek, Denise K.
Wang, Jian
Song, Taoran
Zhao, Junfeng
Qiu, Ning
Guan, Yongxian
Zhou, Zhiyuan
Williams, Trevor
Bao, Rui
Briais, Anne
Brown, Elizabeth A.
Chen, Yifeng
Clift, Peter D.
Colwell, Frederick S.
Dadd, Kelsie A.
Ding, Weiwei
Almeida, Ivan Hernandez
Huang, Xiao-Long
Hyun, Sangmin
Jiang, Tao
Koppers, Anthony A. P.
Li, Qianyu
Liu, Chuanlian
Liu, Zhifei
Nagai, Renata H.
Peleo-Alampay, Alyssa
Su, Xin
Tejada, Maria Luisa G.
Trinh, Hai Son
Yeh, Yi-Ching
Zhang, Chuanlun
Zhang, Fan
Zhang, Guo-Liang
Xu, Xing
Lin, Jian
Sun, Zhen
Zhu, Jian
Yao, Yongjian
Zhao, Xixi
Liu, Qingsong
Kulhanek, Denise K.
Wang, Jian
Song, Taoran
Zhao, Junfeng
Qiu, Ning
Guan, Yongxian
Zhou, Zhiyuan
Williams, Trevor
Bao, Rui
Briais, Anne
Brown, Elizabeth A.
Chen, Yifeng
Clift, Peter D.
Colwell, Frederick S.
Dadd, Kelsie A.
Ding, Weiwei
Almeida, Ivan Hernandez
Huang, Xiao-Long
Hyun, Sangmin
Jiang, Tao
Koppers, Anthony A. P.
Li, Qianyu
Liu, Chuanlian
Liu, Zhifei
Nagai, Renata H.
Peleo-Alampay, Alyssa
Su, Xin
Tejada, Maria Luisa G.
Trinh, Hai Son
Yeh, Yi-Ching
Zhang, Chuanlun
Zhang, Fan
Zhang, Guo-Liang
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DOI
10.1002/2014GC005567
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Keywords
Deep tow magnetic survey
Magnetic anomaly
Crustal evolution
Modeling
International Ocean Discovery Program Expedition 349
South China Sea tectonics
Magnetic anomaly
Crustal evolution
Modeling
International Ocean Discovery Program Expedition 349
South China Sea tectonics
Abstract
Combined analyses of deep tow magnetic anomalies and International Ocean Discovery Program Expedition 349 cores show that initial seafloor spreading started around 33 Ma in the northeastern South China Sea (SCS), but varied slightly by 1–2 Myr along the northern continent-ocean boundary (COB). A southward ridge jump of ∼20 km occurred around 23.6 Ma in the East Subbasin; this timing also slightly varied along the ridge and was coeval to the onset of seafloor spreading in the Southwest Subbasin, which propagated for about 400 km southwestward from ∼23.6 to ∼21.5 Ma. The terminal age of seafloor spreading is ∼15 Ma in the East Subbasin and ∼16 Ma in the Southwest Subbasin. The full spreading rate in the East Subbasin varied largely from ∼20 to ∼80 km/Myr, but mostly decreased with time except for the period between ∼26.0 Ma and the ridge jump (∼23.6 Ma), within which the rate was the fastest at ∼70 km/Myr on average. The spreading rates are not correlated, in most cases, to magnetic anomaly amplitudes that reflect basement magnetization contrasts. Shipboard magnetic measurements reveal at least one magnetic reversal in the top 100 m of basaltic layers, in addition to large vertical intensity variations. These complexities are caused by late-stage lava flows that are magnetized in a different polarity from the primary basaltic layer emplaced during the main phase of crustal accretion. Deep tow magnetic modeling also reveals this smearing in basement magnetizations by incorporating a contamination coefficient of 0.5, which partly alleviates the problem of assuming a magnetic blocking model of constant thickness and uniform magnetization. The primary contribution to magnetic anomalies of the SCS is not in the top 100 m of the igneous basement.
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Author Posting. © American Geophysical Union, 2014. This article is posted here by permission of American Geophysical Union for personal use, not for redistribution. The definitive version was published in Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems 15 (2014): 4958–4983, doi:10.1002/2014GC005567.
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Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems 15 (2014): 4958–4983