Japan Geoscience Union Meeting 2022

Presentation information

[E] Oral

S (Solid Earth Sciences ) » S-IT Science of the Earth's Interior & Techtonophysics

[S-IT20] New perspectives on accretion and exhumation processes during oblique plate convergence

Mon. May 23, 2022 10:45 AM - 12:15 PM 101 (International Conference Hall, Makuhari Messe)

convener:Timothy B Byrne(University of Connecticut), convener:Jian-Cheng Lee(Academia Sinica), Asuka Yamaguchi(Atomosphere and Ocean Research Institute, The University of Tokyo), convener:Yui Kouketsu(Department of Earth & Planetary Sciences, Graduate School of Environmental Studies, Nagoya University), Chairperson:Jian-Cheng Lee(Academia Sinica), Timothy B Byrne(University of Connecticut)

10:45 AM - 11:00 AM

[SIT20-07] Intermingled Geodynamic and kinematic context of South China Sea subduction, Okinawa trough opening and Taiwan orogeny

★Invited Papers

*Minghui Zhao1, Jean-Claude Sibuet2, Jonny Wu3, Chao-Shing Lee4 (1.SCSIO South China Sea Institute of Oceanology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, 2.3Ifremer Centre de Brest, 3.University of Houston, 4.National Taiwan Ocean University)

Keywords:South China Sea tomography, EU margin bayonet shape, Ryukyu tear fault, Ryukyu slab retreat, less deformed northeastern SCS margin, highly deformed Taiwan margin

The geodynamics and plate tectonics of the South China Sea (SCS)-Taiwan region since Miocene times are uncertain because the former extent and tectonic configuration of the subducted easternmost SCS along the Manila trench is uncertain. Here we unravel the regional kinematic context from main offshore constraints including published unfolding of the Manila slab from seismic tomography, which provides insight on restoring the subducted part of the SCS. We reconstruct a bayonet-shaped, stepped northern SCS continent-ocean boundary (COB) that consists of a northeastern SCS COB segment (called ‘S3’), trending N070° that roughly parallels the present SCS shelf; a 350-km long ~N-S trending segment S2 that steps north to Hualien; and, a third segment S1 that extends from east of Hualien beneath the Ryukyu subduction zone trending N085° that ends near Miyako Island in the Ryukyus.

The distance between present COB and S1 gives extension through time in the Okinawa trough, with a maximum of ~100 ±20 km extension since late Miocene (10 Ma). We interpret S1 as a zone of weakness since ~18 Ma that ruptured from Miyako Island to east of Hualien as a tear fault, with the Huatung basin-Philippine Sea plate (HB-PSP) subducting northwestward between the two sides of the tear fault. The Manila transcurrent fault initiated ~18 Ma ago at the onset of the tear and progressively moved eastward, creating the intra-oceanic Luzon arc, which began collision ~7 Ma ago along the EU margin. From ~7 to 6.5 Ma Taiwan was uplifted west of the Longitudinal valley. The Luzon arc and forearc basins were shortened within the Coastal range. Plate kinematic reconstructions from ~18 Ma to Present are synthesized in terms of continental or oceanic nature of the main PSP-HB and EU entities before their subduction that provide new understanding on Taiwan, PSP-SCS kinematics, and regional histories. This work is supported by Key projects of the Chinese National Natural Science Foundation (contracts 91958212, 41730532).

References:
Lee, Y.-H., T. Byrne, W.-H. Wang, W. Lo, R.-J. Rau and H.-Y. Lu (2015). Simultaneous mountain building in the Taiwan orogenic belt. Geology, 43, 451–454. http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/G36373.1.
Wu, J., J. Suppe, R. Lu and R. Kanda (2016). Philippine Sea and East Asian plate tectonics since 52 Ma constrained by new subducted slab reconstruction methods. J. Geophys. Res., 121, 4670–4741. doi:10.1002/2016JB012923.