2022
DOI: 10.20944/preprints202203.0017.v1
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Initiation of a “Lost” Large River on the East Asia Margin in the Middle Eocene

Abstract: The forming of large rivers are the integral consequences of the deep earth process and the surface. In contrast to the hot topics for rivers related to orogenic domains, rift-related large rivers are largely ignored especially in deep time studies. The Cenozoic East Asia margin provides very good opportunity to observe this kind of rivers. It has been believed that basin-and-swell physiography dominated the East Asia margin and impeded the forming of large rives in the early Cenozoic. In this paper, we combin… Show more

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“…Furthermore, molasse deposits developed in the eastern part of the Jianghan Basin, whereas extensive lacustrine deposits appeared in its interior (Hubei BGMR, 1990). Meanwhile, provenance tracking results from boreholes in the Yangtze River Delta (Liu et al, 2022) and East China Sea Basin (Fu et al, 2022) indicate that large flowing rivers did not exist in the Cretaceous. This shows that there was no modern Yangtze River in the eastern Huangling Massif in the Cretaceous.…”
Section: Implications For the Evolution Of The Middle Yangtze Rivermentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Furthermore, molasse deposits developed in the eastern part of the Jianghan Basin, whereas extensive lacustrine deposits appeared in its interior (Hubei BGMR, 1990). Meanwhile, provenance tracking results from boreholes in the Yangtze River Delta (Liu et al, 2022) and East China Sea Basin (Fu et al, 2022) indicate that large flowing rivers did not exist in the Cretaceous. This shows that there was no modern Yangtze River in the eastern Huangling Massif in the Cretaceous.…”
Section: Implications For the Evolution Of The Middle Yangtze Rivermentioning
confidence: 99%