Abstract
Recognition
of the pre-spreading tectonic characteristics of the South China Sea
(SCS) continental margin is key to understanding how the SCS opened.
However, information on this subject is extremely scarce because of the
lack of direct chronological constraints on deformation events. The
International Ocean Discovery Program sampled greenschist-facies
mylonite from the basement of the Outer Margin High at site U1504 in the
SCS, which could provide information on the pre-spreading history. The
microstructure analysis revealed that two episodes of extension had
affected the mylonites, namely early ductile and late brittle
deformation. Pre-mylonite, syn-mylonite and post-mylonite carbonate
veins were identified on the basis of the intersecting relationships
with the mylonite foliation. The pre-mylonite carbonate veins yielded
U–Pb ages of 210 ± 20 and 195 ± 32 Ma, which might represent the age of
the protolith. The age of the syn-mylonite carbonate vein is 135 ± 12
Ma. No effective ages were obtained for the post-mylonite carbonate
veins using U–Pb dating.
The
δ13C, δ18O and87Sr/86Sr compositions of the
post-mylonite carbonate veins suggest that they were formed by
hydrothermal fluid precipitation dominated by seawater.
Considering
the extensively developed marine environment in the northern continental
margin after the late Eocene, the post-mylonite carbonate veins at site
U1504 likely formed in the Eocene or later. Combining the
microstructure, geochemistry and seismic profile, we hypothesize that
post-mylonite carbonate veins were formed during early Cenozoic rifting.
In reference to the geological background, we conclude that the basement
of the SCS margin experienced at least two stages of extension before
spreading: the first stage occurred during the Early Cretaceous and was
caused by rollback of the Paleo-Pacific plate;
the
second occurred in the early Cenozoic because of passive rifting. These
multiple extensional events of the active continental margin and of the
passive margin collectively resulted in thinning the SCS continental
margin.
Keywords: Continental margin of the South China Sea;
Pre-spreading tectonics; International Ocean Discovery Program 368;
Greenschist-facies mylonite;
Carbonate
U–Pb dating