Content deleted Content added
Citation bot (talk | contribs) Alter: url. URLs might have been anonymized. Add: s2cid, authors 1-1. Removed parameters. Some additions/deletions were parameter name changes. | Use this bot. Report bugs. | Suggested by AManWithNoPlan | #UCB_webform 1/2103 |
m →Taiwan as an active example of flipping of subduction reversal: Clean up/General fixes, typo(s) fixed: south-north → south–north |
||
Line 69:
A sharp contrast of landforms in Taiwan lures many people to investigate. The northern part of Taiwan has many flat plains such as Ilan Plain and Pingtung Plain,<ref name=":52222">{{Cite journal|last1=Angelier|first1=Jacques|last2=Chang|first2=Tsui-Yü|last3=Hu|first3=Jyr-Ching|last4=Chang|first4=Chung-Pai|last5=Siame|first5=Lionel|last6=Lee|first6=Jian-Cheng|last7=Deffontaines|first7=Benoît|last8=Chu|first8=Hao-Tsu|last9=Lu|first9=Chia-Yü|date=2009-03-10|title=Does extrusion occur at both tips of the Taiwan collision belt? Insights from active deformation studies in the Ilan Plain and Pingtung Plain regions|journal=Tectonophysics|series=Geodynamics and active tectonics in East Asia|volume=466|issue=3–4|pages=356–376|doi=10.1016/j.tecto.2007.11.015|bibcode=2009Tectp.466..356A}}</ref> while the southern part of Taiwan is concentrated with many high mountains like [[Yushan (mountain)|Yushan]] reaching about 3950m. This huge difference in topography is the consequence of '''the flipping of subduction polarity'''.<ref name=":132222"/> Most of models studying this phenomenon will focus on an active collision in Taiwan which appears to reveal the incipient stages of subduction reversal.<ref name=":132222"/><ref name=":03" /><ref name=":322"/><ref name=":23" /><ref name=":73" /><ref name=":93" />
The collision of N- trending Luzon arc in [[Philippine Sea Plate|Philippine Sea plate]] (PP) with E-trending [[Eurasian Plate|Eurasian plate]] (EP) started at mid-Miocene<ref name=":132222"/> forming an intra-oceanic subduction system.<ref name=":322" /><ref>{{Cite journal|last1=Leat|first1=P. T.|last2=Larter|first2=R. D.|date=2003-01-01|title=Intra-oceanic subduction systems: introduction|url=http://sp.lyellcollection.org/content/219/1/1|journal=Geological Society, London, Special Publications|language=en|volume=219|issue=1|pages=1–17|doi=10.1144/GSL.SP.2003.219.01.01|issn=0305-8719|bibcode=2003GSLSP.219....1L|s2cid=131046715}}</ref> Taiwan was formed by this process. The
[[File:Taiwan_geology.jpg|thumb|center|526x526px
|