JpGU-AGU Joint Meeting 2017

講演情報

[EE] 口頭発表

セッション記号 S (固体地球科学) » S-IT 地球内部科学・地球惑星テクトニクス

[S-IT29] [EE] New perspectives on East Asia geodynamics from the crust to the mantle

2017年5月23日(火) 09:00 〜 10:30 A03 (東京ベイ幕張ホール)

コンビーナ:Timothy B Byrne(University of Connecticut)、木村 学(東京海洋大学・学術研究院)、Jonny Wu(University of Houston)、沖野 郷子(東京大学大気海洋研究所)、座長:Byrne Tim(University of Connecticut)、座長:沖野 郷子(東京大学大気海洋研究所)

09:35 〜 09:50

[SIT29-03] The origin of the early Cenozoic belt-boundary thrust and the Izanagi-Pacific ridge subduction in the western Pacific margin

*木村 学1山口 飛鳥2亀田 純3北村 有迅4橋本 善孝5浜橋 真理6 (1.東京海洋大学・学術研究院、2.東京大学・大気海洋研究所、3.北海道大学・大学院理学研究院、4.鹿児島大学・大学院理工学研究科、5.高知大学・自然科学系、6.国立研究開発法人産業技術総合研究所)

The belt-boundary thrust within the Cretaceous-Tertiary accretionary complex in the Shimanto Belt, SW Japan extends more than ~1,000 km along the Japanese islands. A common understanding of the thrust is an out-of-sequence thrust as a result of continuous accretion since the late Cretaceous period and kinematic reason to keep a critically tapered wedge. The timing of the accretion-gap and thrusting, however, coincides with encounter of the Paleocene-early Eocene Izanagi-Pacific spreading ridge with the trench along the western Pacific margin, which is recently re-hypothesized younger than the previous assumption of Kula-Pacific ridge subduction in the late Cretaceous period. Cessation of magmatic activity along the continental margin, and unconformity in the forearc basin with uplift and subsidence is consistently explained by the ridge subduction hypothesis. This is not only in SW Japan but also more northern Asian margin in Hokkaido and Sakhalin, and Shikote-Alin. This Paleocene-early Eocene ridge subduction hypothesis is also consistent with recently acquired tomographic image beneath the Asian continent. The timing of the Izanagi-Pacific ridge subduction along the western Pacific margin lets to revive the classic hypotheses for a great reorganization of the Pacific plate motion represented as the Emperior-Hawai bend between the ~47 Ma to 42 Ma due to the change in subduction torque balance, and the Oligo-Miocene back-arc spreading following the ridge subduction in the western Pacific margin.