Long Van Hoang et al. (2010): Large-scale erosional response of SE Asia to monsoon evolution reconstructed from sedimentary records of the Song Hong-Yinggehai and Qiongdongnan Basins, South China Sea

Leg/Site/Hole:
ODP 184
ODP 184 1148
Identifier:
2011-002471
georefid

10.1144/SP342.13
doi

Creator:
Long Van Hoang
University of Aberdeen, Department of Geology and Petroleum Geology, Aberdeen, United Kingdom
author

Clift, Peter D.
University of Tokyo, Japan
author

Schwab, Anne M.
University of Nanjing, China
author

Huuse, Mads
Marathon International Petroleum, United Kingdom
author

Duc Anh Nguyen
Vietnam Petroleum Institute, Vietnam
author

Zhen Sun
Chinese Academy of Sciences, South China Sea Institute of Oceanography, China
author

Identification:
Large-scale erosional response of SE Asia to monsoon evolution reconstructed from sedimentary records of the Song Hong-Yinggehai and Qiongdongnan Basins, South China Sea
2010
In: Clift, Peter D. (editor), Tada, R. (editor), Zheng, H. (editor), Monsoon evolution and tectonic-climate linkage in Asia
Geological Society of London, London, United Kingdom
342
219-244
The Song Hong-Yinggehai (SH-Y) and Qiongdongnan (Qi) basins together form one of the largest Cenozoic sedimentary basins in SE Asia. Here we present new records based on the analysis of seismic data, which we compare to geochemical data derived from cores from Ocean Drilling Program (ODP) Site 1148 in order to derive proxies for continental weathering and thus constrain summer monsoon intensity. The SH-Y Basin started opening during the Late Paleocene-Eocene. Two inversion phases are recognized to have occurred at c. 34 Ma and c. 15 Ma. The Qi Basin developed on the northern, rifted margin of South China Sea, within which a large canyon developed in a NE-SW direction. Geochemical and mineralogical data show that chemical weathering has gradually decreased in SE Asia after c. 25 Ma, whereas physical erosion became stronger, especially after c. 12 Ma. Summer monsoon intensification drove periods of faster erosion after 3-4 Ma and from 10-15 Ma, although the initial pulse of eroded sediment at 29.5-21 Ma was probably triggered by tectonic uplift because this precedes monsoon intensification at c. 22 Ma. Clay mineralogy indicates more physical erosion together with high sedimentation rates after c. 12 Ma suggesting a period of strong summer monsoon in the Mid-Miocene.
English
Serial
Coverage:Geographic coordinates:
North:22.0000
West:105.3000East: 111.0000
South:16.0000

Stratigraphy; Geomorphology; Asia; basins; bedload; Cenozoic; chemical weathering; China; clay minerals; climate change; cores; cross sections; East Asian monsoon; erosion; erosion rates; Far East; Hainan China; Leg 184; monsoons; North Pacific; Northwest Pacific; Ocean Drilling Program; ODP Site 1148; Pacific Ocean; paleoclimatology; Qiongdongnan Basin; reconstruction; sedimentary basins; sedimentation rates; seismic stratigraphy; sheet silicates; silicates; South China Sea; Southeast Asia; tectonics; temporal distribution; Tertiary; uplifts; weathering; West Pacific; Yinggehai Basin;

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