Echo characters and sedimentary processes along a rifting continental margin, northeast of Taiwan

Authors
Citation
E. Hong et Is. Chen, Echo characters and sedimentary processes along a rifting continental margin, northeast of Taiwan, CONT SHELF, 20(4-5), 2000, pp. 599-617
Citations number
52
Categorie Soggetti
Aquatic Sciences
Journal title
CONTINENTAL SHELF RESEARCH
ISSN journal
02784343 → ACNP
Volume
20
Issue
4-5
Year of publication
2000
Pages
599 - 617
Database
ISI
SICI code
0278-4343(200003)20:4-5<599:ECASPA>2.0.ZU;2-V
Abstract
The northeastern offshore of Taiwan, including the southern-most East China Sea continental margin, Ilan Shelf, Ilan Ridge and the western tip of the Okinawa Trough, is characterized by active rifting and an energetically com plex hydrodynamic flow regime. In this study, sedimentary processes on the sea floor were inferred from regional mapping of 3.5 kHz echo characters. E ight distinct echo types were mapped, and based on echo type distribution, analysis of sediments and regional bathymetry, these were interpreted as de posits that had been formed under the influence of various local hydrodynam ic processes. Different sedimentary processes, interpreted from the litholo gy and distribution pattern of sediments, were found to prevail on differen t physiographic provinces. In the southern East China Sea continental shelf margin, it is the outflow of Taiwan Strait Water and the on-shelf intrusio n, upwelling and countercurrent induced by the impinging and turning of the Kuroshio Current that largely determine the distribution of sediments. On the narrow Ilan continental shelf, the deposition is mainly influenced by s ubaqueous deltaic and shallow marine processes. Over the rifting tip of the Okinawa Trough, including the Okinawa Trough Basin and its nearby slopes, the primary seafloor-shaping agents have been the mass-wasting processes an d turbidity currents. Since the observed sediment data is in good consisten cy with other hydrographic data, the studies of transportation and depositi on patterns of sediment can provide good constraints for the interpretation of physical oceanographic data. (C) 2000 Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved.