The relationship between Late Cenozoic tectonic events and stress field and basin development in northeast Japan
- 10 November 1994
- journal article
- Published by American Geophysical Union (AGU) in Journal of Geophysical Research
- Vol. 99 (B11) , 22261-22274
- https://doi.org/10.1029/94jb00854
Abstract
The regional tectonic stress field, basin development, and crustal deformation of the NE Japan arc in the interval between 32 Ma to the Quaternary can be synthesized based on dike, vein, and fault orientation data, as well as on the compilation of the regional geology. An extensional stress field became prevalent from 32 Ma, and major normal faulting started at 25–20 Ma, which resulted from back arc rifting. Normal faulting, trending nearly parallel to the arc, propagated from the present Japan Sea coast to the forearc side, following the trenchward migration of the main volcanic field. From 20 to 15 Ma, normal faults with an oblique trend to the arc developed due to the counterclockwise rotation of NE Japan. The rapid clockwise rotation of SW Japan since 16 Ma produced a NW‐SE directed transtensional stress regime in the NE Japan arc. Due to crustal stretching associated with this pull‐apart movement, the back arc side of the NE Japan arc subsided rapidly to middle bathyal environments. After the termination of the opening of the Japan Sea at about 14 Ma, a neutral stress regime prevailed, which included phases of both weak extension and compression. Lithospheric cooling eventually led to thermal subsidence of the back arc region, and igneous underplating caused uplift of the axial zone of the volcanic arc. The increase in velocity of the westward motion of the Pacific plate at around 4 Ma produced strong compression across the arc, reactivating most of the Miocene normal faults, and uplifting the volcanic arc. The greatest crustal shortening occurred in areas that were stretched the most in the Miocene within the volcanic arc, which implies tectonic inversion.Keywords
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