Wang Pinxian et al. (2003): Evolution of the South China Sea and monsoon history revealed in deep-sea records

Leg/Site/Hole:
ODP 184
Identifier:
2004-046078
georefid

10.1360/03wd0156
doi

Creator:
Wang Pinxian
Tongji University, Laboratory of Marine Geology, Shanghai, China
author

Jian Zhimin
Chinese Academy of Sciences, China
author

Zhao Quanhong
China University of Geosciences, China
author

Li Qianyu
author

Wang Rujian
author

Liu Zhifei
author

Wu Guoxuan
author

Shao Lei
author

Wang Jiliang
author

Huang Baoqi
author

Fang Dianyong
author

Tian Jun
author

Li Jianru
author

Li Xianhua
author

Wei Gangjian
author

Sun Xiangjun
author

Luo Yunli
author

Su Xin
author

Mao Shaozhi
author

Chen Muhong
author

Identification:
Evolution of the South China Sea and monsoon history revealed in deep-sea records
2003
Chinese Science Bulletin
Science Press, Beijing, China
48
23
2549-2561
As the third summary report of ODP Leg 184 to the South China Sea (SCS), this paper discusses the evolution of the East Asian monsoon and the SCS basin. A multi-proxy approach, involving geochemistry, micropaleontology, pollen and other analyses, was adopted for reconstructing the evolutionary history of the East Asian monsoon, which was characterized by a series of paleo-climate events especially at 8, 3.2, 2.2 and 0.4 Ma. The new record indicates similar stages in the development of the East and South Asian monsoons, with an enhanced winter monsoon over East Asia being the major difference. The rich spectrums of monsoon variability from the southern SCS also reveal other characteristic features of the low latitude ocean. Evidence for the evolution of the SCS includes the hemipelagic Oligocene sediments, implying the existence of deep water environments during the early seafloor spreading stage of the SCS basin. The four major unconformities and some remarkable diagenetic features in upper Oligocene deposits indicate the strongest tectonic events in the region. From a careful comparison of lithologies and sedimentation rates, we conclude that the prominent differences in sedimentary environments between the southern and northern SCS were established only by approximately 3 Ma.
English
Serial
Coverage:Geographic coordinates:
North:9.2143
West:113.1707East: 113.1707
South:9.2143

Stratigraphy; Cenozoic; deep-sea environment; Leg 184; lithostratigraphy; marine environment; marine sediments; monsoons; Neogene; North Pacific; Northwest Pacific; Ocean Drilling Program; Oligocene; Pacific Ocean; paleo-oceanography; paleoclimatology; Paleogene; provenance; Quaternary; sediment transport; sediments; South China Sea; Tertiary; unconformities; West Pacific; wind transport;

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