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Marginal basin evolution: the southern South China Sea [An article from: Marine and Petroleum Geology]

Author C.S. Hutchison
Publisher Elsevier
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Book Details
PublisherElsevier
ISBN / ASINB000RR0DHG
ISBN-13978B000RR0DH2
AvailabilityAvailable for download now
MarketplaceUnited States 🇺🇸

Description

This digital document is a journal article from Marine and Petroleum Geology, published by Elsevier in 2004. The article is delivered in HTML format and is available in your Amazon.com Media Library immediately after purchase. You can view it with any web browser.

Description:
The southern South China Sea is divided into contrasting morphology by the West Baram Line. To the west is the Sundaland extinct passive margin in which rifting began in the Eocene (~46 Ma) and ceased at 19-21 Ma (anomaly 6), where sea-floor spreading began much later than along the shelf of China. The break-up hiatus lasted ~3-5 Ma marked by the Mid-Miocene unconformity, also preserved on land Sarawak. The post-rift strata date from ~16 Ma and drape over the rifted topography. To the east is a convergent margin that became a collision zone in the Middle Miocene. The Sunda Shelf is of uniform ~30km thickness except in localised deep basins, and extends to a water depth of ~200m. The continental slope is narrow. The continental rise (Dangerous Grounds), is covered by water ranging from 500m to 3.5km depth at the continent-ocean transition. Its width ranges from 170 to 330km. The Rajang Delta extends over the shelf and continental slope. Its post-rift sediments drape over the rifted proximal topography of the Dangerous Grounds. To the east the drape is thinner and has not completely buried the rifted topography. The cuestas appear to have supported the carbonate build-up infrastructures of the Spratly Islands, whose slopes rise abruptly from a sea-floor of 2-3km depth. The Sabah and Brunei margin is a collision zone that was formerly convergent. The on land geology indicates a Mesozoic ophiolitic basement. The main collision feature is the Western Cordillera, constructed mainly of sandy Eocene to Lower Miocene turbidites, predominantly Oligocene to Lower Miocene in the West Crocker (32-18 Ma), uplifted episodically throughout the Upper Miocene and Pliocene, 14-8 Ma. The 2km deep Northwest Borneo Trough may be a relict of the convergence phase, but could also be a collisional foredeep. The oil-prolific Baram Delta, resulting from uplift and erosion of the Western Cordillera, has built out as far as the Northwest Borneo Trough. It is suggested that the passive margin continental rise (Dangerous Grounds) has been underthrust beneath Sabah to cause uplift of the Western Cordillera. The West Baram Line accordingly abruptly separates the collision zone from the western extinct passive margin; and is a now extinct major right-lateral transform fault.