Abstract

AbstractThe Tanlu Fault Zone (TFZ) is considered as a suture of the intra‐continental collision between the South and North China plates, and it has attracted considerable geological, geochemistry, and geophysical investigations. However, its deep structures still lack clear delineation and the related tectonic processes are still debated without a clear consensus. To better characterize the TFZ as a plate boundary in east China, a 2‐D land seismic survey extending 87 km was conducted across its southern segment to investigate the underlying complex structures. Acoustic full‐waveform inversion (FWI) is applied to the early arrivals of the land seismic data to reconstruct the high‐resolution P‐wave velocity model of the upper crust (above ∼3.5 km). Structures of the crust and the uppermost mantle are further constrained through deep seismic profiling (DSP). The integrated geological interpretation from the FWI and DSP results suggests massive magma upwelling activities, characterized by the reflection‐free zone revealed by DSP and the high‐velocity anomaly recovered by FWI. The TFZ in the study area is found to be a deeply seated fault system with a positive flower structure at its shallow part, which suggests it has undergone a transpression regime. Also, the DSP result provides evidence for the subduction of the South China plate under the North China plate. Finally, a three‐stage model including the compression, transpression, and extension stages is proposed based on the new seismic results to better constrain the tectonic evolution of the southern segment of the TFZ.

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