Abstract

AbstractThe Goto Islands are located at the westernmost tip of the Japan archipelago, and preserve a lower–middle Miocene sedimentary sequence deposited during rifting of the continental margin and opening of the Sea of Japan. The stratigraphy of the Goto Group and new K–Ar, fission‐track, and U–Pb age data were used to determine the initial conditions of rifting in southwest Japan. The thickness of the Goto Group is 2000–3000 m. The lower unit (ca. 22–17.6 Ma) consists of thick, greenish, volcaniclastic rocks with basaltic volcanic material, representing the initial stages of continental rifting. The middle unit (ca. −17.6 Ma) consists of alternating sandstones and shales deposited in lacustrine and meandering fluvial environments in a syn‐rift sedimentary basin during a period of volcanic activity. The upper unit (ca. 17.6–16.8 Ma) consists of thick sandstones of fluvial–deltaic facies that were deposited during rapid subsidence at the continental margin. This unit was deposited by a large fluvial system that flowed into the Sea of Japan. These sequences contain relatively cooler to warmer flora (Daijima‐type) and record the warm period of the Miocene Climatic Optimum. The Goto felsic volcanic rocks (16.8 ~ 15.4 Ma) unconformably overlie the Goto Group, and granitic magmatism (ca. 16–14.5 Ma) occurred after sedimentation of the Goto Group. The widespread lacustrine, meandering–braided fluvial, and vast deltaic systems of the Goto Group, and felsic volcanism, were formed due to rapid subsidence that produced a horst‐and‐graben basin during the early stages of rifting of a volcanic arc along the eastern margin of Eurasia. These events occurred from 22.0 to 16.8 Ma before and during the formation of the Sea of Japan.

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