TY - JOUR
T1 - Paleomagnetism of Late Jurassic to Early Cretaceous red beds from the Cardamom Mountains, southwestern Cambodia
T2 - Tectonic deformation of the Indochina Peninsula
AU - Tsuchiyama, Yukiho
AU - Zaman, Haider
AU - Sotham, Sieng
AU - Samuth, Yos
AU - Sato, Eiichi
AU - Ahn, Hyeon Seon
AU - Uno, Koji
AU - Tsumura, Kosuke
AU - Miki, Masako
AU - Otofuji, Yo ichiro
N1 - Funding Information:
Some of the statistical analyses were conducted using the computing programs of Cogné (2003) . The Ministry of Industry, Mines and Energy (MIME), Cambodia, arranged the efficient field logistics. The authors would like to thank Professor Naoto Ishikawa (Kyoto University) for providing his laboratory facilities. In addition, we would like to thank Kazuya Okayama and Seiya Miyata for their help during the sampling trip. Comments from two anonymous reviewers improved this manuscript This research work was partly supported by Grant-in aid (Nos. 18403012 , 22403012 ) from the Ministry of Education, Culture, Sports, Science and Technology, Japan ( MEXT ). We also offer our thanks to the Global Center of Excellence (GCOE), a program under the International Center of Planetary Sciences (also a part of MEXT) for their support in accomplishing this project.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2015 Elsevier B.V..
PY - 2016/1/15
Y1 - 2016/1/15
N2 - Late Jurassic to Early Cretaceous red beds of the Phuquoc Formation were sampled at 33 sites from the Sihanoukville and Koah Kong areas of the Phuquoc-Kampot Som Basin, southwestern Cambodia. Two high-temperature remanent components with unblocking temperature ranging 650°-670 °C and 670-690 °C were identified. The magnetization direction for the former component (D=5.2°, I=18.5° with α95=3.1° in situ) reveals a negative fold test that indicates a post-folding secondary nature. However, the latter component, carried by specular hematite, is recognized as a primary remanent magnetization. A tilt-corrected mean direction of D=43.4°, I=31.9° (α95=3.6°) was calculated for the primary component at 11 sites, corresponding to a paleopole of 47.7°N, 178.9°E (A95=3.6°). When compared with the 130 Ma East Asian pole, a southward displacement of 6.0°±3.5° and a clockwise rotation of 33.1°±4.0° of the Phuquoc-Kampot Som Basin (as a part of the Indochina Block) with respect to East Asia were estimated. This estimate of the clockwise rotation is ~15° larger than that of the Khorat Basin, which we attribute to dextral motion along the Wang Chao Fault since the mid-Oligocene. The comparison of the herein estimated clockwise rotation with the counter-clockwise rotation reported from the Da Lat area in Vietnam suggests the occurrence of a differential tectonic rotation in the southern tip of the Indochina Block. During the southward displacement of the Indochina Block, the non-rigid lithosphere under its southern tip moved heterogeneously, while the rigid lithosphere under the Khorat Basin moved homogeneously.
AB - Late Jurassic to Early Cretaceous red beds of the Phuquoc Formation were sampled at 33 sites from the Sihanoukville and Koah Kong areas of the Phuquoc-Kampot Som Basin, southwestern Cambodia. Two high-temperature remanent components with unblocking temperature ranging 650°-670 °C and 670-690 °C were identified. The magnetization direction for the former component (D=5.2°, I=18.5° with α95=3.1° in situ) reveals a negative fold test that indicates a post-folding secondary nature. However, the latter component, carried by specular hematite, is recognized as a primary remanent magnetization. A tilt-corrected mean direction of D=43.4°, I=31.9° (α95=3.6°) was calculated for the primary component at 11 sites, corresponding to a paleopole of 47.7°N, 178.9°E (A95=3.6°). When compared with the 130 Ma East Asian pole, a southward displacement of 6.0°±3.5° and a clockwise rotation of 33.1°±4.0° of the Phuquoc-Kampot Som Basin (as a part of the Indochina Block) with respect to East Asia were estimated. This estimate of the clockwise rotation is ~15° larger than that of the Khorat Basin, which we attribute to dextral motion along the Wang Chao Fault since the mid-Oligocene. The comparison of the herein estimated clockwise rotation with the counter-clockwise rotation reported from the Da Lat area in Vietnam suggests the occurrence of a differential tectonic rotation in the southern tip of the Indochina Block. During the southward displacement of the Indochina Block, the non-rigid lithosphere under its southern tip moved heterogeneously, while the rigid lithosphere under the Khorat Basin moved homogeneously.
KW - Cambodia
KW - Indochina Peninsula
KW - Late Jurassic to Early Cretaceous
KW - Paleomagnetism
KW - Tectonics
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U2 - 10.1016/j.epsl.2015.11.045
DO - 10.1016/j.epsl.2015.11.045
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:84949870563
SN - 0012-821X
VL - 434
SP - 274
EP - 288
JO - Earth and Planetary Sciences Letters
JF - Earth and Planetary Sciences Letters
ER -