4.5 Article

Thermo-tectonic history of coastal NW South China Sea: A low-temperature thermochronology study

Journal

TECTONOPHYSICS
Volume 833, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.tecto.2022.229344

Keywords

South China; Thermochronology; South China Sea; Topography; Hainan Plume

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [41576036, 41776078]
  2. Key Special Project for Introduced Talents Team of Southern Marine Science and Engineering Guangdong Laboratory (Guangzhou) [GML2019ZD0104]
  3. AuScope program of the National Collaborative Research Infrastructure Strategy (NCRIS)

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The coastal region of the South China Sea is crucial for studying the thermo-tectonic histories of onshore and offshore areas, and the surface response to deep-seated mantle anomalies. This study analyzes low temperature thermochronological data from onshore granite samples to understand the thermo-tectonic evolution of the southern margin of the South China Block. The findings reveal a three-stage cooling pattern, with an early Cretaceous to early Late Cretaceous cooling phase, followed by thermal quiescence, and then a further cooling episode starting in the early Eocene. The study also suggests that the tectonic evolution of the region was controlled by subduction and plate convergence during different geological periods.
Coastal NW South China Sea is a critical region for evaluating the contrasting thermo-tectonic histories between the onshore and offshore regions, and the possible surface response to a deep-seated mantle anomaly. To further elucidate the regional post-late Mesozoic tectonic cooling history, low temperature thermochronological data are reported from 16 onshore granite samples. These new data, together with previously reported data, are used to constrain the thermo-tectonic evolution of the onshore southern margin of the South China Block (SCB). Results show that the area has mostly experienced a similar three-stage cooling pattern, characterized by a similar to 3-8 degrees C/Myr Early Cretaceous to early Late Cretaceous (similar to 130- similar to 80 Ma) cooling phase, followed by a period of relative thermal quiescence, and then a further cooling episode initiated in the early Eocene and for most samples continuing until the present day. The early cooling phase is recorded extensively along the southern SCB margin and is probably a combined response to several alternating compressional and extensional tectonic events during the Late Jurassic to early Late Cretaceous (similar to 150- similar to 80 Ma). The second phase of relative thermal quiescence suggests, in contrast to the offshore and the eastern coast, that the onshore southern SCB margin was not affected markedly by compressional tectonics during the latest Cretaceous. Post-Eocene enhanced cooling and exhumation are probably related to widespread Eocene to Early Oligocene extension, and subsequent uplift due to convergence between the Indo-Australian, Eurasian and Pacific Plates in the onshore southern SCB margin. Southeastward extrusion due to Indo-Asia collision resulted in a decrease in uplift amplitude from NW to SE, but is not recorded in the offshore region. Different tectonic effects result in spatial relief variation from the onshore to the offshore southern SCB margin in the latest Cretaceous obviously different from in the late Cenozoic. NE Hainan Island, which was most likely mountainous during the Late Cretaceous to Paleocene, but became an area of low elevation and relief with gradual exhumation, particularly following significant Eocene-Early Oligocene exhumation. Neogene thermal histories in coastal NW South China Sea do not record any marked cooling rate changes which could be related to significant recent surface uplift and erosion, indicating that the deep anomalous body beneath the LeMiong Depression might be just a branch of a much larger low-velocity anomalous structure. Our results suggest that the thermo-tectonic evolution of the onshore southern SCB margin (Guangdong) was mainly controlled by Cretaceous NE-trending subduction of the Palaeo-Pacific plate beneath the southeastern SCB, whilst during the Late Cenozoic it was mainly affected by the convergence of adjacent plates, particularly by the Indo-Asia collision.

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