Origin and motion history of the Philippine Sea Plate

被引:237
作者
Hall, R
Ali, JR
Anderson, CD
Baker, SJ
机构
[1] UNIV SOUTHAMPTON, DEPT OCEANOG, SOUTHAMPTON SO9 5NH, HANTS, ENGLAND
[2] UNIV CALIF SANTA BARBARA, DEPT GEOL SCI, SANTA BARBARA, CA 93106 USA
基金
英国自然环境研究理事会;
关键词
D O I
10.1016/0040-1951(95)00038-0
中图分类号
P3 [地球物理学]; P59 [地球化学];
学科分类号
0708 ; 070902 ;
摘要
The Philippine Sea Plate is the one major plate whose Tertiary motion is poorly constrained and whose origin is problematical. Its southern boundary is the Sorong Fault system which is part of a major left-lateral fault system at the northern margin of the Australian plate. The southern part of the plate in eastern Indonesia has been neglected in most syntheses but includes some of the oldest rocks within the plate which are separated from remnant arcs of the Daito Ridge province of the northern Philippine Sea by the West Philippine Central Basin. The east Indonesian islands of the Halmahera-Waigeo region contain a good Mesozoic and Tertiary stratigraphic record indicating a long are history for the southern part of the plate. New palaeomagnetic data from these islands define two sub-areas: an area forming part of the Philippine Sea Plate north of the Sorong Fault, and an area within the Sorong Fault system, The area north of the fault records a long-term clockwise rotation history whereas that within the fault zone records local rotations interpreted as due to deformation at the plate edge. Rocks of Philippine Sea Plate origin within both areas record similar latitudinal shifts. The rotation of the area north of the Sorong Fault is considered to represent the motion of the southern part of the Philippine Sea Plate, The new data indicate large Tertiary clockwise rotations similar to earlier suggestions for other parts of the plate but record a discontinuous and more complex motion history than previously suggested. For the southern part of the plate there was 40 degrees rotation with northward translation between 0 and 25 Ma, no significant rotation between 25 and 40 Ma, and there was 50 degrees rotation with southward translation between 40 and 50 Ma. We show that the new palaeomagnetic data form part of a single set with earlier palaeomagnetic data from elsewhere in the plate. The translation history of the southern part of the plate in eastern Indonesia can be reconciled with northward motions recorded elsewhere and can be used to determine rotation poles for the plate (15 degrees N, 160 degrees E for the interval 5-25 Ma, and 10 degrees N, 150 degrees E for the interval 40-50 Ma), Reconstructions based on these poles predict that at similar to 45 Ma the Palau-Kyushu Ridge had a WNW-ESE orientation which is very different from that postulated by many models used to explain the widespread boninite volcanism in the Izu-Bonin-Marianas forearc at this time. The long are history of the southern part of the plate and the reconstructions based on the rotation poles calculated from the palaeomagnetic data favour an origin for the West Philippine Basin by spreading in a backarc basin.
引用
收藏
页码:229 / 250
页数:22
相关论文
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