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Evolution of the South China Sea basin and the deep circulation |
JIAN Zhimin1, TIAN Jun1, HUANG Wei1, MA Xiaolin2, WAN Sui3 |
1. State Key Laboratory of Marine Geology, School of Ocean and Earth Science, Tongji University, Shanghai 200092, China;
2. Institute of Earth Environment, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Xi'an 710061, China;
3. South China Sea Institute of Oceanography, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Guangzhou 310012, China |
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Abstract: The present-day South China Sea (SCS) was evolved from land to sea in the Eocene 34 million years ago, and its paleo-water was very deep. At the turn of the Miocene/Oligocene, 24 million years ago, due to the T60 tectonic movement, the entire SCS basin became a deep-sea environment. Since the Miocene, 10.0, 6.5 and 1.2 million years ago, along with the collision of the Luzon island arc with the Eurasian plate, the semi-closed degree of the SCS basin increased, so that the SCS deep-water could only come from the Pacific above the sill depth (~2600 m) of the Bashi Strait. After that, due to the global sea level change, the deep-water exchange between the SCS and the Pacific on both sides of the Bashi Strait displayed the glacial/interglacial mode.
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Received: 11 May 2020
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