2019
DOI: 10.1080/00206814.2019.1597392
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Sedimentary budget of the Northwest Sub-basin, South China Sea: controlling factors and geological implications

Abstract: We calculated the sedimentary budget of the Northwest Sub-basin (NWSB), South China Sea for different geological times based on interpretations of four multichannel seismic profiles across the basin with constraints from International Ocean Discovery Program (IODP) Expeditions 367 and 368 drilling results. Sedimentation was generally dominated by regional tectonic events and climate change, but complicated by local tectonic events and geographic position, which resulted in a specific sedimentary budget in the … Show more

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Cited by 7 publications
(3 citation statements)
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References 70 publications
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“…8 Ma, suggestive of the drying trend (Dettman et al, 2001;Singh et al, 2011). This interpretation is consistent with apparent reductions in erosion rates based on records from many Asian marginal seas at that time (Clift, 2006;Wu et al, 2019) as well as records of chemical weathering in the South China Sea Wan et al, 2007). Since the onset of Northern Hemispheric glaciation (NHG) at ca.…”
Section: ■ History Of the Asian Monsoonsupporting
confidence: 80%
“…8 Ma, suggestive of the drying trend (Dettman et al, 2001;Singh et al, 2011). This interpretation is consistent with apparent reductions in erosion rates based on records from many Asian marginal seas at that time (Clift, 2006;Wu et al, 2019) as well as records of chemical weathering in the South China Sea Wan et al, 2007). Since the onset of Northern Hemispheric glaciation (NHG) at ca.…”
Section: ■ History Of the Asian Monsoonsupporting
confidence: 80%
“…(c) Integrated sediment budget for all the basins in the Gulf of Thailand and the northern Sunda Shelf, including the slope sediments documented by Li et al. (2013) and the deep‐water sediments in the south‐western South China Sea from Wu et al (2019). (d) Comparison of the sediment budget for the Gulf of Thailand Sunda Shelf region and the eroded volumes estimated from the regional thermochronology of all potential source areas in Peninsula and mainland Thailand and Indochina that might be supplying sediment into the basins.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Secondary porosity formed by mineral dissolution in the Paleogene reservoirs of the Pearl River Mouth Basin effectively improves reservoir storage capacity and fluid flow [16,17]. Exploration efforts should focus on potential high-quality reservoirs with developed secondary porosity in the middle and deep reservoirs of the Baiyun Sag [18][19][20].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%