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Featured researches published by Jong Chang Wu.


International Geology Review | 2006

Review and New Insights on Foreland Tectonics in Western Taiwan

Kenn Ming Yang; Shiuh Tsann Huang; Jong Chang Wu; Hsin Hsiu Ting; Wen Wei Mei

Taiwan is located on the boundary between the Eurasian and Philippine Sea plates. As a result, foreland tectonics in western Taiwan can be divided into two domains: pre-orogenic extensional structures and those of the outer part of the fold-and-thrust belt that mingled with syn-orogenic normal fault reactivation. This paper proposes a synthetic model for foreland tectonics in western Taiwan, and advances possible mechanisms by which pre-existing normal faults might have affected the evolving thrust tectonics in foreland areas of western Taiwan. The sedimentary basins of pre-orogenic extensional tectonics are of two types—Paleogene and Neogene—which reflect two stages of continental rifting. Results from several studies have been synthesized to provide a tectonic map displaying the regional distribution of tectonic settings at different stages and the trends of normal faults in the basins. The similarity of the en echelon patterns of arrangement for both the Neogene and Paleogene tectonic and structural settings, as shown by the tectonic map, strongly suggests that the entire foreland area was influenced by regional dextral shear. We also provide a detailed description of structures in each tectonic setting, and propose a tectonic evolution model for Cenozoic basin architecture in western Taiwan. Among the pre-orogenic sedimentary basins, the Neogene ones, in which normal faults extend to the frontal areas of the fold-and-thrust belt in western Taiwan, open northeastward. Structural analysis of the thrust fault geometry indicates that, during development of the fold-and-thrust belt on the rifted continental margin in western Taiwan, the pre-existing normal faults in northwestern Taiwan were reactivated to form inversion structures of various types on different scales, depending on the angle between the strike of the normal faults and the direction of maximum compressive stress field. In southwestern Taiwan, where normal fault reactivation is absent from the eastern part of the foreland areas, pre-existing normal faults interacted with developing low-angle thrusts in the inner part of the fold-and-thrust belt. Normal fault reactivation, regardless of how it occurs, thus plays an important role in forming the deformation front of the fold-and-thrust belt. Based on this view, we propose that the orocline or tectonic arc of the island has been influenced more by normal fault reactivation than by the morphology of basement highs.


Geological Magazine | 2015

Late Permian mafic rocks identified within the Doba basin of southern Chad and their relationship to the boundary of the Saharan Metacraton

J. Gregory Shellnutt; Tung Yi Lee; Chih Cheng Yang; Shin Tai Hu; Jong Chang Wu; Kuo Lung Wang; Ching-Hua Lo

The Doba gabbro was collected from an exploration well through the Cretaceous Doba basin of southern Chad. The gabbro is composed mostly of plagioclase, clinopyroxene and Fe–Ti oxide minerals and displays cumulus mineral textures. Whole-rock 40 Ar– 39 Ar step-heating geochronology yielded a Late Permian plateau age of 257 ± 1 Ma. The major and trace elemental geochemistry shows that the gabbro is tholeiitic in composition and has trace element ratios (i.e. La/Yb N > 7; Sm/Yb PM > 3.4; Nb/Y > 1; Zr/Y > 5) indicative of a basaltic melt derived from a garnet-bearing mantle source. The moderately enriched Sr–Nd isotopes (i.e. I Sr = 0.70495 to 0.70839; ɛNd (T) = −1.0 to −1.3) fall within the mantle array (i.e. OIB-like) and are similar to other Late Permian plutonic rocks of North-Central Africa (i.e. I Sr = 0.7040 to 0.7070). The enriched isotopic composition of the Doba gabbro contrasts with the more depleted compositions of the spatially associated Neoproterozoic post-Pan-African within-plate granites. The contrasting Nd isotope composition between the older within-plate granites and the younger Doba gabbro indicates that different mantle sources produced the rocks and thus may mark the southern boundary of the Saharan Metacraton.


Terrestrial Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences | 2017

Structural inversion in the northern South China Sea continental margin and its tectonic implications

Chin Da Huang; Tung Yi Lee; Ching-Hua Lo; Sun-Lin Chung; Jong Chang Wu; Ching Lung Tien; Meng Wan Yeh; Shiu Chi Chen; Yu Lu Chan; Ching Yi Hu

The northern South China Sea (SCS) continental margin was proposed to be an active margin during the Mesozoic. However, only a few papers discussed the Mesozoic structural evolution in this region. Here, we provide information based on the seismic profile interpretations with age control from biostratigraphic studies and detrital zircon U-Pb dates of well MZ-1-1 in the western Dongsha-Penghu Uplift of the northern SCS continental margin. The industrial seismic profiles reveal evidence for structural inversion as represented by folds and high-angle reverse faults, formed by reactivation of pre-existing normal faults. The inversion event likely started after the Early Cretaceous, and developed in Late Cretaceous, but ceased before the Cenozoic. The areal extent of the structural inversion was restricted in the western Dongsha-Penghu Uplift and was approximately 100 km in width. Based on the paleogeographic reconstruction of SCS, the structural inversion was likely formed by a collision between the seamount (volcanic islands) swarm of the current North Palawan block (mainly the Calamian Islands) and the northern SCS continental margin around Late Cretaceous. Article history: Received 30 May 2016 Revised 14 March 2017 Accepted 27 March 2017


Terrestrial Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences | 2007

Subsurface Structure, Physical Properties, and Fault Zone Characteristics in the Scientific Drill Holes of Taiwan Chelungpu-Fault Drilling Project

Jih Hao Hung; Yun Hao Wu; En Chao Yeh; Jong Chang Wu


Lithos | 2012

Age and geochemical characteristics of Paleogene basalts drilled from western Taiwan: Records of initial rifting at the southeastern Eurasian continental margin

Kuo Lung Wang; Sun-Lin Chung; Yi Ming Lo; Ching-Hua Lo; Huai Jen Yang; Ryuichi Shinjo; Tung Yi Lee; Jong Chang Wu; Shiuh Tsann Huang


Marine Geophysical Researches | 2004

Deformation Front Development at the Northeast Margin of the Tainan Basin, Tainan–Kaohsiung Area, Taiwan

Shiuh Tsann Huang; Kenn Ming Yang; Jih Hao Hung; Jong Chang Wu; Hsin Hsiu Ting; Wen Wei Mei; Shiang Horng Hsu; Min Lee


Terrestrial Atmospheric and Oceanic Sciences | 2007

3D Geometry of the Chelungpu Thrust System in Central Taiwan: Its Implications for Active Tectonics

Kenn Ming Yang; Shiuh Tsann Huang; Jong Chang Wu; Hsin Hsiu Ting; Wen Wei Mei; Min Lee; Hsiang Horng Hsu; Chang Jie Lee


Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology | 2005

Dry climate near the Western Pacific Warm Pool: Pleistocene caliches of the Nansha Islands, South China Sea

Shou Yeh Gong; Horng Sheng Mii; Kuo-Yen Wei; Chorng Sherng Horng; Chen-Feng You; Fu Wen Huang; Wen Rong Chi; Tzen-Fu Yui; Pei Keng Torng; Shieu Tsann Huang; Shih Wei Wang; Jong Chang Wu; Kenn Ming Yang


Journal of African Earth Sciences | 2016

A mineralogical investigation of the Late Permian Doba gabbro, southern Chad: Constraints on the parental magma conditions and composition

J. Gregory Shellnutt; Tung Yi Lee; Chih Cheng Yang; Shin Tai Hu; Jong Chang Wu; Yoshiyuki Iizuka


Journal of the Geological Society of China | 1996

Possible links between the development of Plio-Pleistocene coral reef limestones and thrust migration in southwestern Taiwan

Shou Yeh Gong; Tung Yi Lee; Jong Chang Wu; Shi Wei Wang; Kenn Ming Yang

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Tung Yi Lee

National Taiwan Normal University

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Ching-Hua Lo

National Taiwan University

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Jih Hao Hung

National Central University

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Horng Sheng Mii

National Taiwan Normal University

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J. Gregory Shellnutt

National Taiwan Normal University

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