AUTHOR=Liang Hao , Zhang Ke , Li Zhigang , Chen Zhen , Hui Gege , Huang Ping , Tian Qingying , Tang Yongjie , Chen Cong , Zhang Yipeng , He Xiaohui , Yan Yonggang , Dai Xiangming , Li Zhongyun , Wang Weitao , Zhang Peizhen TITLE=Temporally varied coastal uplift rates north of the Littoral Fault Zone since the late Quaternary in the northern South China Sea: Insights from the wave-cut platform and cosmogenic exposure dating JOURNAL=Frontiers in Earth Science VOLUME=10 YEAR=2023 URL=https://www.frontiersin.org/journals/earth-science/articles/10.3389/feart.2022.1026181 DOI=10.3389/feart.2022.1026181 ISSN=2296-6463 ABSTRACT=

While understanding the long-term slip rate of active normal faults is essential for the comprehensive assessment of seismic activity, it is difficult due to the absence of age control in the erosional bedrock region. The preserved sequence of wave-cut platforms in granite allows exploration of the long-term slip rate in the footwall of some normal faults. We investigated wave-cut platforms in the southern Pearl River Delta (PRD), a coastal delta transected by the seismically active Littoral Fault Zone (LFZ) in the northern South China Sea, to derive slip rates and their impacts on the seismic hazard potential. We mapped a flight of four wave-cut platforms (T1–T4), dated the T2 and T4 platforms by 10Be cosmogenic nuclide dating, and used the absolute age to correlate the un-dated platform to global sea-level highstands. Our results allocate the ages of 128 ka, 197 ka, and 239 ka to the upper three wave-cut platforms and yield temporally various uplift rates ranging from 0.30 to 0.38 mm/a during 239–128 ka to 0.09 mm/a since 128 ka. A decrease in the uplift rate, which coincided with a decreased subsidence rate within the PRD in previous work, implied a weakened differential uplift onshore of the LFZ system. Our findings infer that the transgression event occurred as early as marine isotope stage (MIS) 7 in the PRD, consistent with the view that Pleistocene sedimentation began in MIS 5 or earlier in the PRD.