Li Qianyu; Zheng Hongbo; Zhong Guangfa; Wang Pinxian (2005): Tectonic events indicated by late Oligocene slumped deposits in the South China Sea. China University of Geoscience, Wuhan, China, Earth Science. Journal of China University of Geoscience, 30 (1), 19-24, georefid:2009-027249

Abstract:
Late Oligocene to earliest Miocene deposition at ODP Site 1148 in the northern South China Sea is characterized by slumps and long sedimentation breaks. Tectonic-driven hiatuses occurred from the mid Oligocene (28 Ma) to the early Miocene (23 Ma), with the main hiatus falling at 25 Ma, marked by the base of the slump. The four hiatuses recognized together erased at least 3 Ma of the late Oligocene sedimentary record. A synthesis of lithological, biostratigraphic and geochemical results indicates a stepwise seafloor spreading mode for the late Oligocene South China Sea, climaxing at the "25 Ma transitional event". This series of tectonic events must have resulted from interactions between the Eurasian, Australian and Philippine-Pacific Plates, subsequently leading to a change in seafloor spreading toward the south, where rifting had been more prominent and extension was stronger, probably as a direct response to sinistral strike-slip and extension of the Red River fault. The slumped deposits at Site 1148 provide direct evidence of this spreading transition in the late Oligocene South China Sea.
Coverage:
West: 116.3356 East: 116.3356 North: 18.5010 South: 18.5010
Relations:
Expedition: 184
Site: 184-1148
Data access:
Provider: SEDIS Publication Catalogue
Data set link: http://sedis.iodp.org/pub-catalogue/index.php?id=2009-027249 (c.f. for more detailed metadata)
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