T h e uniform stretching model has been applied to seismic reflection profiles and well-log information from the Pearl River Mouth Basin on the northern flank of the South China Sea.Stretching factors were calculated from subsidence curves determined from the stratigraphy by using the backstripping technique to remove the effects of compactiori and sediment loading.Variations in rift topography, palaeobathymetry and global sea-level were taken into account. We argue that the Pearl River Mouth Basin formed by lithospheric extension by a factor of about 1.8, lasting from Late Cretaceous to late Oligocene times. Stretching factors calculated from subsidence agree with those determined from the geometry of normal faulting and from crustal thinning. Thus there is no indication of a significant discrepancy between the different estimates of stretching. T h e geometry of faulting suggests that considerable amounts of local footwall uplift occurred during the rifting period. Small differences between the observed and calculated subsidence curves ( -400 m in the middle Miocene) are best explained by minor amounts of extension (p-1.1). The time-temperature history of sediments within the basin has also been calculated so that expected vitrinite reflectance and oil abundance could be determined. T h e results are consistent with each other and are in reasonable agreement with observations from wells.
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