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  1. Abstract

    The dip angles of slabs are among the clearest characteristics of subduction zones, but the factors that control them remain obscure. Here, slab dip angles and subduction parameters, including subduction duration, the nature of the overriding plate, slab age, and convergence rate, are determined for 153 transects along subduction zones for the present day. We present a comprehensive tabulation of subduction duration based on isotopic ages of arc initiation and stratigraphic, structural, plate tectonic and seismic indicators of subduction initiation. We present two ages for subduction zones, a long‐term age and a reinitiation age. Using cross correlation and multivariate regression, we find that (1) subduction duration is the primary parameter controlling slab dips with slabs tending to have shallower dips at subduction zones that have been in existence longer; (2) the long‐term age of subduction duration better explains variation of shallow dip than reinitiation age; (3) overriding plate nature could influence shallow dip angle, where slabs below continents tend to have shallower dips; (4) slab age contributes to slab dip, with younger slabs having steeper shallow dips; and (5) the relations between slab dip and subduction parameters are depth dependent, where the ability of subduction duration and overriding plate nature to explain observed variation decreases with depth. The analysis emphasizes the importance of subduction history and the long‐term regional state of a subduction zone in determining slab dip and is consistent with mechanical models of subduction.

     
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  2. Abstract

    A well‐constrained plate deformation model may lead to an improved understanding of sedimentary basin formation and the connection between subduction history and over‐riding plate deformation. Building quantitative models of basin kinematics and deformation remains challenging often due to the lack of comprehensive constraints. The Bohai Bay Basin (BBB) is an important manifestation of the destruction of the North China Craton, and records the plate kinematic history of East Asia during the Cenozoic. Although a number of interpretations of the formation of the BBB have been proposed, few quantitative basin reconstruction models have been built to test and refine previous ideas. Here, we developed a quantitative deformation reconstruction of the BBB constrained with balanced cross‐sections and structural, stratigraphic and depositional age data. Our reconstruction suggests that the basin formation process was composed of three main stages: Paleocene‐early Eocene (65–42 Ma) extension initiation, middle Eocene‐early Oligocene (42–32.8 Ma) extension climax and post‐Oligocene (32.8–0 Ma) post‐extensional subsidence. The deformation of the BBB is spatially heterogeneous, and its velocity directions rotated clockwise during the basin formation process. The reconstruction supports the interpretation that the BBB formed via strike‐slip faulting and orthogonal extension and that the basin is classified as a composite extensional‐transtensional basin. We argue that the clockwise rotation of the basin velocity field was driven by the counter‐clockwise rotation in the direction of Pacific Plate subduction. The kinematics of the BBB imply that the Pacific Plate may have been sufficiently coupled to the over‐riding East Asian Plate during the critical period of Pacific Plate reorganization. The new reconstruction provides a quantitative basis for studies of deformation processes not only in the vicinity of the BBB, but also more broadly throughout East Asia.

     
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    The Northwest Shelf (NWS) of Australia is characterized by offshore basins associated with Permian and Jurassic rifting and was only slowly subsiding by the Neogene. International Ocean Discovery Program (IODP) Expedition 356 targeted this region by coring four sites in the Northern Carnarvon and Roebuck Basins and two sites in the Perth Basin to the south on the Australian western margin. We use detailed lithological, physical property and age data with paleobathymetric interpretations, to infer tectonic subsidence apparently confined to the NWS that reverses (uplifts) with about the same amplitude and rate as an earlier subsidence event. About 300 m of tectonic subsidence occurred over one million years from 6 to 5 million years ago and then reverses when 300 m of tectonic uplift occurred from 2 to 1 Ma. The along strike extent of this subsidence pattern is ∼ 400 km. The similarity of magnitude and duration of the subsidence and uplift phases suggest that the subsidence is reversible. The results cannot be explained by glacial eustatic variability nor can the uplift event be attributed to sediments filling the accommodation space generated earlier. Reversible subsidence is a key fingerprint of dynamic topography. Although the rates of subsidence and uplift are roughly ∼ 300 m/Myr, a substantial portion of the changes occur over less than 1 Myr and the rates inferred from a detailed least squares analysis can reach up to about 500 m/Myr. These rates are incompatible with dynamic topography associated with motion of Australia over large-scale convection (10 to 40 m/Myr) or that associated with instability of the base of the lithosphere (<15 m/Myr). The vertical motions are too large to be associated with simple flexure of a plate and plate buckling in that the required amplitudes would lead to permanent deformation of the plate. A new geodynamic mechanism is required to fit the observations. 
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