Evolution of the continental margin of south to central Vietnam and its
relationship to opening of the South China Sea (East Vietnam Sea)
Abstract
The continental margin south to central Vietnam is notable for its high
elevation plateaus many of which are covered by late Cenozoic basalt
flows. It forms the westernmost margin of a wide continental rift of the
South China Sea (East Vietnam Sea), and uplift has been considered a
result of either rifting or younger intraplate basalt magmatism. To
investigate margin development apatite thermochronometry was applied to
a dense array of samples collected from across and along the margin of
south to central Vietnam. Results, including thermal history models,
identified a distinct regional episode of fast cooling between c. 37 and
30 Ma after which cooling rates remained low. The fast cooling coincides
with a period of fast extension across the South China Sea (East Vietnam
Sea) region that preceded continental break-up recorded by Oligocene
grabens onshore. A thermal model is used test different processes that
might influence the inferred cooling including a distinct pulse of
exhumation; a decrease in exhumation followed by an associated transient
decrease in geothermal gradients and, underplating coincident with
rifting. Thermal relaxation following Mesozoic arc magmatism is ruled
out as geotherms returned to background rates within 20 Myrs of
emplacement, well before the onset of fast cooling. Models support fast
cooling attributed to accelerated erosion during early stages of
rifting. Some additional heating from either underplating, and/or hot
mantle upwellings is also possible. No evidence was found to support
regional uplift associated with the intraplate magmatism, enhanced
monsoon-driven erosion or seafloor spreading dynamics