Peng Zhao , Xiaobin Shi , Lu Liu , Kui Liu , Yongqiang Shen , Ziqiang Ren , Xiaoqiu Yang , Yongbin Jin
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Ubiquitous onshore Cenozoic basins of the southern margin of the South China Block (SCB) systematically show a stratigraphic hiatus in the sedimentary succession. The absence of strata between the residual Paleogene and the overlying Quaternary in the onshore basin is a serious obstacle to reconstruct their evolutionary history and completely understand the tectonic evolution of the southern SCB margin. Using multiple independent methods, this study reconstructs the entire tectonic subsidence and uplift history in the Sanshui Basin. To do so, we first constrain the eroded thickness and initial erosion time between the Quaternary strata and the residual Huayong Formation (∼41 Ma). The results show that the erosion thickness at the unconformity in the northwestern Sanshui Basin was approximately 2200 m, and the erosion event lasted from approximately 29 Ma to the early Quaternary. The tectonic evolution of the Sanshui Basin during the Paleogene to early Quaternary was characterized by four successive tectonic episodes, three rifting events, and one uplift stage. The first rifting episode lasted from ca. 66–48 Ma, during which approximately 1000 m of tectonic subsidence accommodated the deposition of the Xinzhuangcun (66–59 Ma), Buxin (59–53 Ma), and Baoyue (53–48 Ma) formations. This was followed by the second and third rifting episodes from ca. 48–29 Ma, during which the average tectonic subsidence was approximately 650–850 m, and the residual Huayong Formation (ca. 48–41 Ma) and eroded strata (ca. 41–29 Ma) accumulated. From 29 Ma to the early Quaternary, a tectonic uplift of approximately 1150 m occurred, with a rate of 43 m/Myr, which triggered the erosion of most sediments deposited during the second and third rifting episodes. Our results strongly suggest that although the main depocenters were located offshore since the second rifting episode, rifting in the Sanshui Basin continued until the occurrence of the late Cenozoic erosion event. The differential evolution between uplift (and erosion) onshore and subsidence offshore since the late Paleogene is probably related to the coastward attenuation of southeastern extrusion caused by the Indo–Asian plate collision.
期刊介绍:
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