Abstract

The offshore basins in the East Asian Continental Shelf have undergone distinct tectono-geomorphic-sedimentary evolution since the Neogene, driven by complex interactions between tectonic and surface Earth processes. However, the contribution of the latter to the evolution of the offshore basins has been less studied. The landscape simulation software Badlands serves as an ideal tool to investigate the impacts of tectonic and surface processes on sedimentation as it simulates the sediment routing in a source-to-sink context. Focusing on the southern East China Sea Basin (ECSB) and the northern South China Sea Shelf Basin (SCSSB), two key components of the East Asian Continental Shelf, we used Badlands to reconstruct the tectono-geomorphic-sedimentary evolution since the Neogene. It revealed two-phase evolutionary processes: (1) the southern ECSB and the northern SCSSB were in the unified shelf environment and represented as an integral during the Early Miocene, though the northern SCSSB experienced anomalous subsidence due to the southward jump of the SCS mid-ocean ridge. The integrated southern ECSB and northern SCSSB experienced uplift and denudation since the Middle Miocene, under the influence of the Philippine Sea Plate extrusion. (2) Subsequently, the southern ECSB and the northern SCSSB were separated into two independent basins in the Late Miocene, when Taiwan Island was significantly uplifted due to the Philippine Sea Plate extrusion and the arc-continental collision. Then Taiwan Island experienced a multi-stage uplift characterized by southward and westward migration. It concluded that tectonics (i.e. Taiwan Orogeny and the subduction of the Philippine Sea Plate) primarily dominated the differential evolution of the southern ECSB and the northern SCSSB. Surface Earth processes (i.e. the intensification of the East Asian Monsoon and the sea-level fluctuation) are the secondary contributors.

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