scholarly journals Latest early-earliest middle Miocene deep-sea molluscs in the Japan Sea borderland – the warm-water Higashibessho fauna in Toyama Prefecture, central Japan

2004 ◽  
Vol 8 (1) ◽  
pp. 29-42 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kazutaka Amano ◽  
Toshikazu Hamuro ◽  
Masui Hamuro
2008 ◽  
Vol 27 (2) ◽  
pp. 161-175 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hirokazu Ozawa ◽  
Hideaki Nagamori ◽  
Tomotaka Tanabe

Abstract. Pliocene strata (4–3 Ma) in the Togakushi area, central Japan, yield significant ostracods, which allow investigation of the origins of high-latitude (Arctic–Atlantic) taxa and the Japan Sea endemic species, together with their post-Miocene history of extinction-speciation and migration. Three types of extinct species are found here: (1) cryophilic species in common with, or closely related to, species in Plio-Pleistocene assemblages described from the Japan Sea; (2) species closely related to, or comparable with, species that characterize Miocene Japan; and (3) species endemic to the Pliocene Japan Sea. Type (1) contains species closely related to high-latitude species known from the Arctic and northern Atlantic Oceans. Their presence suggests migration from the northwestern Pacific to the northern Atlantic through the Arctic seas since the Late Pliocene after the opening of the Bering Strait. Both Types (2) and (3) contain genera originating in the south, which show high specific diversity in regions affected by the modern warm Kuroshio Current. Ancestral ostracods of Types (2) and (3) invaded the Japan Sea from the Pacific from the Middle Miocene, and diversified to produce closely related species in the semi land-locked Japan Sea until the Early Pliocene. Two new species Aurila togakushiensis sp. nov. and Aurila shigaramiensis sp. nov. are described.


Author(s):  
Yukinobu Okamura ◽  
Kenji Satake ◽  
Ken Ikehara ◽  
Akira Takeuchi ◽  
Kohsaku Arai
Keyword(s):  
Deep Sea ◽  

2001 ◽  
Vol 217 ◽  
pp. 135-143 ◽  
Author(s):  
S Kojima ◽  
R Segawa ◽  
I Hayashi ◽  
M Okiyama

2019 ◽  
Vol 158 (1) ◽  
pp. 47-71 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hironao Shinjoe ◽  
Yuji Orihashi ◽  
Ryo Anma

AbstractWe present a new dataset of zircon U–Pb ages that document igneous activity in the SW Japan arc during middle Miocene time and discuss its relationship with the opening of the Japan Sea, Philippine Sea plate migration, and subduction of the young hot lithosphere of the Shikoku Basin. Precursory magmatism, characterized by dike and stock intrusions, started c. 15.6 Ma in both Kyushu and the Kii Peninsula. Most plutonism occurred between 15.5 and 13.5 Ma in an area 600 km long and 150 km wide. No along-arc trend was recognized in the U–Pb ages of igneous activity near the trench. Our data indicate that all near-trench middle Miocene igneous activity occurred immediately after the opening of the Japan Sea ceased, i.e. after 16 Ma, implying that melt extraction and the emplacement of granites in the near-trench region had some influence on the back-arc opening. Our data also imply that the trench–trench–trench-type triple junction between the Japan arc and the Izu–Bonin–Mariana arc must have reached the east side of the Kii Peninsula by 15.6 Ma. The wide distribution of contemporaneous magmatic activity along the arc requires a trench-parallel heat source, such as the subduction of a trench-parallel ridge or a young and highly segmented ridge–fracture zone system in addition to the hot wedge mantle condition related to the opening of Japan Sea.


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