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Early-middle Miocene deep-water circulation intensity in the South China Sea: Evidence from a sortable silt record of oceanic red beds (IODP Expedition 367 Site U1500)

Jirawat Deemuenwai a, Zhifei Liu a, *, Yulong Zhao a, Wei Shu a, Baoqi Huang b

a State Key Laboratory of Marine Geology, Tongji University, 200092, Shanghai, China

b School of Earth and Space Sciences, Peking University, Beijing 100871, China 

* Corresponding author. 

E-mail address: lzhifei@tongji.edu.cn


Abstract 

Deep-water circulation is a key process in the Earth system because it transports heat, oxygen, nutrients, and sediments. Understanding deep-water current intensity is challenging due to the lack of accurate data and proxies available for reconstruction. This study demonstrates temporal changes in deep-water current intensity in the South China Sea using the sortable silt proxy of oceanic red beds (ORB) to reconstruct hydrographic evolution. The good correlation between SS (mean size of the sortable silt) and SS% (percentage of the sortable silt), as indicated by the correlation coefficient (r = 0.63), provides the current intensity proxy. The velocity (ΔV) data indicate calibration relationships with a sensitivity of 1.36 ± 0.19 cm/s⋅μm. High SS values occurred between 23.1 and 20.0 Ma, with an average value of 19.8 μm, indicating that the strong Lower Circumpolar Deep Water (LCDW) intensity implies the occurrence of active erosion processes. Then, SS decreased to 18.1 μm between  20.0 and 16.0 Ma due to the expansion of the deep basin. The South China Sea basin experienced thermal subsidence between 16.0 and 15.0 Ma, which resulted in increased depth and a slight intensification of current strength. The strong current intensity during the period of 15.0–14.5 Ma suggests that more sediments were transported further from continental margins to the deep sea following the cessation of seafloor spreading and South China Sea basin thermal subsidence. Moreover, the increased deep-water current intensity during 12.4–11.6 Ma was triggered by the Luzon arc eruption at 13.2 Ma, in addition to the ongoing narrowing of the Luzon Strait. Our research indicates that understanding the deep-water intensity reconstruction played a key role in the evolution of the South China Sea during the early-middle Miocene.


Full Airticle: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.palaeo.2024.112664


Fig.Temporal variations in the reconstructed early-middle Miocene deep-water current intensity in the SCS