1. Online data service for geologic formations (Lexicons) of China, India, Vietnam and Thailand with one‐click visualizations onto East Asia plate reconstructions
- Author
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Wen Du, Suyash Mishra, James G. Ogg, Yuzheng Qian, Sabrina Chang, Karan Oberoi, Aaron Ault, Sabin Zahirovic, Hongfei Hou, D. S. N. Raju, O’Neil Mamallapalli, Gabriele M. Ogg, Haipeng Li, Christopher R. Scotese, and Bui Dong
- Subjects
Earth history ,Gondwana ,GPlates ,Paleogeography ,Stratigraphy ,TimeScale Creator ,Meteorology. Climatology ,QC851-999 ,Geology ,QE1-996.5 - Abstract
Abstract Paleogeography is the merger of sediment and volcanic facies, depositional settings, tectonic plate movements, topography, climate patterns and ecosystems through time. The construction of paleogeographic maps on tectonic plate reconstruction models requires a team effort to compile databases, data sharing standards and map projection methods. Two goals of the Paleogeography Working Group of the International Union of Geological Sciences (IUGS) program for Deep‐Time Digital Earth (DDE) are: (1) to interlink online national lexicons for all sedimentary and volcanic formations, and develop online ones for nations that currently lack these; (2) to target specific regions and intervals for testing/showcasing paleogeography output from the merger of these databases. Following those goals, we developed and applied new cloud‐based lexicon data services and interactive visualization techniques to regions in East Asia. This has been a successful collaboration among computer engineers and plate modellers and has involved stratigraphers in India (ONGC), China (Chengdu Univ. Tech., and Chinese Acad. Geol. Sci.), United States (Paleomap Project, and Purdue Univ.), Australia (GPlates visualization team) and Vietnam (Vietnam Nat. Univ.). Independent online lexicons with map‐based and stratigraphy‐based user interfaces have been developed (as of the date of this submission in March 2022) for all Proterozoic to Quaternary formations on the Indian Plate (over 800) and Vietnam (over 200), the majority of the Devonian through Neogene of China (ca. 2000) and partially for Thailand. A multi‐database search system returns all geologic formations of a desired geologic time from these four independent databases. With one click, users can plot the regional extent of one or of all of those regional formations on different plate reconstruction models of that desired age, and these polygons are filled with the lithologic facies pattern.
- Published
- 2024
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