Geophysical Research Letters (Apr 2023)

Late Oligocene Formation of the Pearl River Triggered by the Opening of the South China Sea

  • Zengjie Zhang,
  • J. Stephen Daly,
  • Yuntao Tian,
  • Chao Lei,
  • Xilin Sun,
  • Eszter Badenszki,
  • Yonghui Qin,
  • Jie Hu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1029/2023GL103049
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 50, no. 8
pp. n/a – n/a

Abstract

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Abstract The Pearl River is one of the largest rivers entering the South China Sea, yet its initiation time remains debated, a topic we address using Pb isotopes in detrital K‐feldspar. Based on these Pb data, Eocene and Early Oligocene sandstones from the northern South China Sea are interpreted to have been supplied with sediment by proximal rivers draining the Cathaysia Block. In contrast, the Late Oligocene and Miocene sandstones are mainly derived from the western Pearl tributaries (e.g., Hongshui River), suggesting that the Pearl River had formed by the Late Oligocene. Detrital zircon data from the Beibuwan Basin previously suggested that the western tributaries flowed into this basin before being captured by the paleo‐Pearl River. These lines of evidence suggest that progressive headward erosion of the eastern Pearl River and late Oligocene integration of this large fluvial system can be linked to contemporaneous sea‐floor spreading of the South China Sea.

Keywords