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The subduction of the west Pacific plate and the destruction of the North China Craton
by
Zhu, Rixiang
, Xu, Yigang
in
Cratons
/ Cretaceous
/ Destruction
/ Earth and Environmental Science
/ Earth Sciences
/ Evolution
/ Fluids
/ Lava
/ Lithosphere
/ Magma
/ Mantle
/ Melts
/ Migration
/ Orogeny
/ Physical properties
/ Plates (tectonics)
/ Review
/ Stagnation
/ Subduction
/ Subduction (geology)
/ Subduction zones
/ Tectonics
/ Transition zone
/ Viscosity
/ Wedges
2019
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The subduction of the west Pacific plate and the destruction of the North China Craton
by
Zhu, Rixiang
, Xu, Yigang
in
Cratons
/ Cretaceous
/ Destruction
/ Earth and Environmental Science
/ Earth Sciences
/ Evolution
/ Fluids
/ Lava
/ Lithosphere
/ Magma
/ Mantle
/ Melts
/ Migration
/ Orogeny
/ Physical properties
/ Plates (tectonics)
/ Review
/ Stagnation
/ Subduction
/ Subduction (geology)
/ Subduction zones
/ Tectonics
/ Transition zone
/ Viscosity
/ Wedges
2019
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The subduction of the west Pacific plate and the destruction of the North China Craton
by
Zhu, Rixiang
, Xu, Yigang
in
Cratons
/ Cretaceous
/ Destruction
/ Earth and Environmental Science
/ Earth Sciences
/ Evolution
/ Fluids
/ Lava
/ Lithosphere
/ Magma
/ Mantle
/ Melts
/ Migration
/ Orogeny
/ Physical properties
/ Plates (tectonics)
/ Review
/ Stagnation
/ Subduction
/ Subduction (geology)
/ Subduction zones
/ Tectonics
/ Transition zone
/ Viscosity
/ Wedges
2019
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The subduction of the west Pacific plate and the destruction of the North China Craton
Journal Article
The subduction of the west Pacific plate and the destruction of the North China Craton
2019
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Overview
While a general concensus has recently been reached as to the causal relationship between the subduction of the west Pacific plate and the destruction of the North China Craton, a number of important questions remain to answer, including the initial subduction of west Pacific plate beneath the eastern Asian continent, the position of west Pacific subduction zone during the peak period of decratonization (i.e., Early Cretaceous), the formation age of the big mantle wedge under eastern Asia, and the fate of the subducted Pacific slab. Integration of available data suggests that the subduction of the western Pacific plate was initiated as early as Early Jurrasic and the subduction zone was situated to 2,200 km west of the present-day trench in the Early Creataceous, as a result of eastward migration of the Asian continent over a distance of ca. 900 km since the Early Cretaceous. The retreat of the subducting west Pacific plate started ∼145 Ma ago, corresponding to the initial formation of the big mantle wedge system in the Early Cretaceous. The subduction of the Pacific slab excerted severe influence on the North China Craton most likely through material and energy echange between the big mantle wedge and overlying cratonic lithosphere. The evolution history of the west Pacific plate was reconstructed based on tectonic events. This allows to propose that the causes of phases A and B for the Yanshanian orogeny were respectively related to rapid low-angle subduction and to lowering subduction angle of the west Pacific plate. At ca. 130–120 Ma, the subduction of the west Pacific plate was characterized by increasing subducting angle, slab rollback and rapid trench retreat, leading to the final stagnation of the subducting slab within the mantle transition zone. This process may have significantly affected the physical property and viscosity of the mantle wedge above the stagnant slab, resulting in non-steady mantle flows. The ingression of slab-released melts/fluids would significantly lower the viscosity of the mantle wedge and overlying lithosphere, inducing decratonization. This study yields important bearings on the relationship between the subduction of the west Pacific plate and the evolution of the lithospheric mantle beneath the North China Craton.
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