Title: Neotectonic activity along the Shanxi rift system, China
Abstract: The Shanxi rift system is one of the most outstanding Pliocene-Quaternary continental rift systems and strong earthquake belts in China. It extends as a series of en echelon left-stepping asymmetrical half-graben basins on the Shanxi Highlands over a distance of more than 1200 km. It describes a sinous S-shaped curve with a NNE-trending transtensional segment in the middle, and NE-ENE-trending extensional domains on both terminal segments. The latter are characterized by apparently synchronous, high-angle normal faulting, accommodating large vertical and relatively smaller lateral strains (3.5–8.5%), which produces the modern basin and range structure. The rift system has been intermittently active since the Pliocene. Geomorphological, neotectonic and seismic studies indicate that the rift system is at present still developing, as demonstrated by the occurrence of strong destructive historical earthquakes of magnitudes 7–8 and the large slip rates on the NNE-trending transtensional faults in the middle segment. The slip rates of these faults reached 4.9–6.4 mm per year during the Holocene. Geophysical studies show that the rifting occurred in a thickened crust, and no compelling evidence exists for the major thermal event in the mantle uniquely associated with the rifting. The development of the Shanxi rift system is consistent with the regional brittle strain pattern of a right-lateral shear belt and a regional stress field of ENE-WSW compression and NNW-SSE extension of the North China subplate. This structural setting corroborates the hypothesis that the deformation is in response to the escape tectonics caused by the Himalayan indenter from the southwest, and at the same time by the counter-clockwise rotation of the intervening crustal blocks. This provides the mode of formation of the Shanxi rift system.
Publication Year: 1993
Publication Date: 1993-03-01
Language: en
Type: article
Indexed In: ['crossref']
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Cited By Count: 134
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