3D Velocity Structure and Its Tectonic Implications in the East China Sea and Yellow Sea
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    Abstract:

    3D structure of the crust and upper mantle in the studied area has been analyzed from surface wave tomography. The velocity distribution in the uppermost crust is symmetrical on two sides of the central line of the sea, and coincides with the structure of crystalline basement. The essential difference in tectonics between the East China Sea and the Yellow Sea mainly lies in that the velocity structures of their lower crust and upper mantle are identical to those of South China and North China respectively. In the upper mantle there exists a high-velocity zone with a nearly EW strike from the Hangzhou Bay, China, to the Tokara Channel, Japan, along about the latitude of 30°N. It is found that between the East China Sea and the Yellow Sea there are systematical differences in geomorphology, geology, seismicity, heat flow, quality factor and gravity and aeromagnetic anomalies, which is related to both left-lateral shear dislocation and right-lateral tear of the Benioff zone from the Hangzhou Bay to the Tokara Channel.It is inferred that the East China Sea was formed by Cenozoic back-arc extension. The boundary between the North China and South China crustal blocks stretches along the southern piedmont of Mts. Daba-Dabie-Hangzhou Bay-Tokara Channel, and the subduction zone at the Okinawa trench is the eastern boundary of the South China crustal block. The movements of the Pacific plate, Indian plate and upper mantle rather than the Philippine plate subduction have played a dominant role for the modern tectonic movements in East Asia.

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Feng Rui, Zhou Hainan, Institute of Geophysics, State Seismological Bureau, Beijing Yao Zhengsheng, Seismological Institute of Lanzhou, Lanzhou Ma Guiming, Li Quanlin Institute of Geophysics, State Seismological Bureau Beijing Fei Zhenbi.1993.3D Velocity Structure and Its Tectonic Implications in the East China Sea and Yellow Sea[J]. Acta Geologica Sinica(),67(3):

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