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This study provides quantitative constraints on Neogene uplift in the Korean peninsula using onshote paleo-shoteline records and seismic data. The eastern margin of Northeast Asia including Korea sits in the back-arc system behind the Western Pacific Subduction Zone, a complex trench triple junction of the Philippine Sea, Pacific, and Eurasian (Amurian) plates. An analysis of seismic data in the subduction zone shows that the pattern of uplift in the peninsula mirrors the extent of deep seismicity in subducting Pacific plate beneath. Combined with previous tomographic studies it is proposed that uplift is partly driven by asthenospheric upwelling caused by a sinking slab during the Neogene. In addition, the SHmax orientations of E-W and N-S trends in the peninsula are consistent with the prevailing in-situ stress fields in the eastern Eurasian continent generated by various plate boundary forces. The uplift in Kotea during the Late Neogene is attributed, in part, to lithospheric failure relating to faulting movements, thus providing a link between dynamic effects of mantle upwelling at sinking slab edge and lithospheric responses driven by plate boundary forces.
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- Publisher :The Korean Geographical Society
- Publisher(Ko) :대한지리학회
- Journal Title :Journal of the Korean Geographical Society
- Journal Title(Ko) :대한지리학회지
- Volume : 47
- No :3
- Pages :328-346
- DOI :https://doi.org/10.22776/kgs.2012.47.3.328


Journal of the Korean Geographical Society






