Abstract

AbstractHow seafloor spreading in marginal basins controls subsidence patterns in continental margins under rift propagation settings remains poorly understood. Herein, based on detailed geological interpretation and backstripping of 37 high‐resolution multichannel seismic reflection sections, we calculate the Cenozoic tectonic subsidence across the Dangerous Grounds (DG), South China Sea, in order to study interactions between seafloor spreading and the propagation of rift basins. Our results show that rapid subsidence occurred in the eastern Dangerous Grounds (EDG) from the Palaeocene to early Oligocene, then migrated westwards to the middle Dangerous Grounds (MDG) during the early Oligocene to early Miocene, and finally reached the western Dangerous Grounds (WDG) during the early to middle Miocene. We interpret this western migration of intensive subsidence as the response of the inherited pre‐Cenozoic heterogeneous lithospheric structure of South China. Thermal re‐equilibration of the lithosphere then dominated the rapid post‐spreading subsidence throughout the whole DG from the middle Miocene. An anomalous subsidence deficit occurred in the EDG during the early Oligocene to early Miocene, and in the MDG during the early to middle Miocene; this phenomenon might be related to small‐scale mantle convection associated with the propagation of seafloor spreading from east to southwest.

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