4.4 Article

The tectonic differences between the east and the west in the deep-water area of the northern South China Sea

Journal

ACTA OCEANOLOGICA SINICA
Volume 35, Issue 1, Pages 86-95

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s13131-016-0799-8

Keywords

structural feature; tectonic evolution; tectonic difference; deep-water basins; northern South China Sea

Categories

Funding

  1. National Basic Research Program (973 Program) of China [2009CB219401]
  2. Science and Technology Program of Guangzhou [201505041038084]
  3. Open Fund of State Key Laboratory of Oil and Gas Reservoir Geology and Exploitation (Southwest Petroleum University) [PLN1401]
  4. Key Laboratory of Gas Hydrate, Ministry of Land and Resources [SHW(2014)-DX-01]
  5. State Key Laboratory Breeding Base of Nuclear Resources and Environment, East China Institute of Technology [NRE1302]

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The deep-water area of the northern South China Sea, which has active and complicated tectonics, is rich in natural gas and gas hydrate. While the tectonic characteristics is different obviously between the east and the west because of the special tectonic position and tectonic evolution process. In terms of submarine geomorphology, the eastern shelf-slope structure in Pearl River Mouth Basin is characterized by having wide sub-basins and narrow intervening highs, whereas the western (Qiongdongnan Basin) structure is characterized by narrow subbasins and wide uplift. As to the structural features, the deep-water sags in the east are all structurally halfgrabens, controlled by a series of south-dipping normal faults. While the west sags are mainly characterised by graben structures with faulting in both the south and north. With regards to the tectonic evolution, the east began neotectonic activity when the post-rifting stage had completed at the end of the Middle Miocene. In the Baiyun Sag, tectonic activity became strong and was characterised by rapid subsidence and obvious faulting. Whereas in the west, neotectonic activity began at the end of the Late Miocene with rapid deposition and weak fault activity.

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