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Hydrothermal fluid-controlled remagnetization of sedimentary rocks in Korea: Tectonic importance of pervasive Tertiary remagnetization

Authors
Kim, WonnyonDoh, Seong-JaeYu, YongjaeLee, Jeong JickSuk, Dongwoo
Issue Date
Sep-2009
Publisher
Elsevier BV
Keywords
Cretaceous; Early Tertiary; Korea; Paleomagnetism; Remagnetization; Tectonics
Citation
Tectonophysics, v.474, no.3-4, pp.684 - 695
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
Tectonophysics
Volume
474
Number
3-4
Start Page
684
End Page
695
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/erica/handle/2021.sw.erica/40902
DOI
10.1016/j.tecto.2009.05.014
ISSN
0040-1951
Abstract
In order to better understand the tectonic environment of the Korean Peninsula since Cretaceous, a paleomagnetic study was carried out on the Jinan Basin located in southwestern Korea. From the demagnetization of 597 samples, we found that remanence is carried by pyrrhotite and/or magnetite (black siltstone) and hematite (red siltstone), which is a common magnetic mineral assemblage of the rocks remagnetized in Early Tertiary in Korea. All the rock units recorded identical ancient geomagnetic field directions. in particular, paleodirections were better clustered in geographic coordinates, indicating a secondary origin. The presence of abundant silicates as inclusions within Fe-oxides and Fe-sulfides confirms the authigenic origin of the magnetic carriers, precipitated by fluid mediated chemical processes. Compilation of the Korean Cretaceous and Tertiary poles indicates that the Jinan Basin was remagnetized in the Early Tertiary age. In addition, comparison of the Korean Cretaceous and Tertiary poles with those from adjacent major terrains including China and Siberia reveals that a dominant feature of tectonic motions in Korea was a vertical-axis rotation. Sense of vertical-axis rotation was time-dependent, with clear distinction between clockwise rotation in Cretaceous and counter-clockwise rotation in Early Tertiary. Such differences in the mode of vertical axis rotation might be caused by the activities of basin-bounding strike-slip faults in Korea, possibly driven by the changes of subduction regime of the Kula-Pacific plate in Early Tertiary. (C) 2009 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
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