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Asymmetry in oceanic crustal structure of the South China Sea basin and its implications on mantle geodynamics
Authors:Fan Zhang  Xubo Zhang  Weiwei Ding  Tingting Wang  Jian Zhu
Institution:1. Department of Ocean Science &2. Engineering, Southern University of Science and Technology , Shenzhen, China;3. Department of Geology &4. Geophysics, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution , Woods Hole, MA, USA;5. State Key Laboratory of Marine Geology, School of Ocean and Earth Sciences, Tongji University , Shanghai, China;6. The Second Institute of Oceanography, State Oceanic Administration , Hangzhou, China;7. Geophysics, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution , Woods Hole, MA, USA
Abstract:ABSTRACT

We investigated the oceanic crustal structure and lithospheric dynamics of the South China Sea (SCS) basin through a comprehensive analysis of residual gravity anomaly and bathymetry combined with seismic constraints and interpretation from geodynamic modelling. We first calculated the residual mantle Bouguer anomaly (RMBA) of the oceanic crustal regions of the SCS by removing from free-air gravity anomaly the predicted gravitational attractions of water-sediment, sediment-crust, and crust-mantle interfaces, as well as the effects of lithospheric plate cooling, using the latest crustal age constraints including IODP Expedition 349 and recent deep-tow magnetic surveys. We then calculated models of the gravity-derived crustal thickness and calibrated them using the available seismic refraction profiles of the SCS. The gravity-derived crustal thickness models correlate positively with seismically determined crustal thickness values. Our analysis revealed that the isochron-averaged RMBA are consistently more negative over the northern flank of the SCS basin than the southern conjugate for magnetic anomaly chrons C8n (~25.18 Ma) to C5Dn (~17.38 Ma), implying warmer mantle and/or thicker crust over much of the northern flank. Computational geodynamic modelling yielded the following interpretations: (1) Models of asymmetric and variable spreading rates based on the relatively high-resolution deep-tow magnetic analysis would predict alternating thicker and thinner crust at the northern flank than the southern conjugate, which is inconsistent with the observed systematically thicker crust on the northern flank. (2) Models of episodic southward ridge jumps could reproduce the observed N-S asymmetry, but only for crustal age of 23.6–20 Ma. (3) Southward migration of the SCS ridge axis would predict slightly thinner crust at the northern flank, which is inconsistent with the observations. (4) Models of higher mantle temperatures of up to 25–50°C or >2% less depleted mantle sources on the northern flank could produce large enough anomalies to explain the observed N-S asymmetries.
Keywords:South China Sea  gravity anomaly  oceanic crustal thickness  North-south asymmetry  mantle geodynamics
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