14 results on '"Li, Shunli"'
Search Results
2. The interactions of volcanism and clastic sedimentation in rift basins: Insights from the Palaeogene‐Neogene Shaleitian uplift and surrounding sub‐basins, Bohai Bay Basin, China.
- Author
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Chen, Hehe, Zhu, Xiaomin, Gawthorpe, Robert L., Wood, Lesli J., Liu, Qianghu, Li, Shunli, Shi, Ruisheng, and Li, Huiyong
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RIFTS (Geology) ,SETTLING basins ,VOLCANISM ,LAVA flows ,VOLCANIC ash, tuff, etc. ,GEOMORPHOLOGY - Abstract
Although volcanism is an important process in the evolution of rift basins, current tectono‐sedimentary models largely neglect its impact on sediment supply, transport pathways, and depositional systems. In this paper, we integrate core, well logs, and 3D seismic data from the Palaeogene‐Neogene Shaleitian (SLT) uplift and surrounding sub‐basins, Bohai Bay Basin, China, to investigate the sedimentology and geomorphology of a volcanic rift basin. Results of this study show that the spatial distribution of extrusive centres was strongly controlled by basement‐involved intra‐basin normal faults. During the early part of the syn‐rift stage, the SLT uplift supplied sediments to transverse fan deltas and braided‐river deltas that fringed the adjacent syn‐rift depocentres. Volcanic deposits mainly occurred as relatively thin lava flow and pyroclastic facies that partially filled fault‐controlled topographic lows, reducing topographic rugosity, and enhanced breaching of basement highs between syn‐rift depocentres. Integration of drainage to the syn‐rift depocentres and development of through‐flowing axial depositional systems was enhanced. During the later part of syn‐rift and in early post‐rift stages, the SLT uplift was progressively inundated, reducing sediment supply to the fringing transverse depositional systems. In contrast, axial braided‐river deltas became the main depositional systems, sourced by large hinterland drainage from the Yanshan fold‐belt to the northwest. Volcanism in the late syn‐rift and early post‐rift occurs as thick lava flow and pyroclastic facies that infill rift topographic lows and locally blocked axial fluvial systems creating isolated lakes. Within hanging wall depocentres, volcanic topographic highs split and diverted axial fluvial and deltaic systems. Furthermore, volcanism supplied large volumes of volcanic sediment to the rift resulting in increased sedimentation rates, and the development of unstable subaerial and subaqueous slopes and deposits, increasing the occurrence of landslides. Based on the observations of this study we update tectono‐sedimentary models for rift basins to include volcanism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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3. Active element pattern measurement in a hybrid antenna array with heterodyne architecture and its application.
- Author
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Yang, Liang, Xie, Li, Li, Shunli, Zhao, Hongxin, and Yin, Xiaoxing
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ANTENNA radiation patterns ,ANTENNA arrays ,ANTENNAS (Electronics) - Abstract
A measurement method of an active element antenna pattern in a hybrid antenna array with heterodyne architecture under a real environment is proposed and applied to the design of an ultralow sidelobe level scanning array. To avoid the phase uncertainty caused by the local oscillator signal in the heterodyne architecture, a phase‐normalized active element pattern (PNAEP) is used to characterize the element antenna patterns of both amplitude and phase. The PNAEP has almost taken account of all the practical factors of an array, such as mutual couplings, various types of element antennas, unequal spacing, or diverse environmental effects. The PNAEP is measured with a 16‐element scanning receiving array with a heterodyne architecture to validate the feasibility of the PNAEP. Based on the PNAEP, the scanning array achieve an ultralow sidelobe level of −33 dB. Applying to various receiving array architectures the PNAEP method is a feasible and universal tool for array synthesis and optimization under real environments. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
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4. Tapered post‐wall slotline antenna loaded with dielectric lens for short‐pulse applications.
- Author
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Yin, Yifan, Yang, Mei, Zhuang, Ying, and Li, Shunli
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ANTENNAS (Electronics) ,DIELECTRICS - Abstract
An exponential tapered post‐wall slotline antenna loaded with dielectric lens is proposed and demonstrated. The theoretical profile of the loaded dielectric lens is derived, and its physical explanation is presented. Besides, the proposed post‐wall structure in the antenna ensures low available characteristic impedance as well as low cross‐polarization levels of the antenna. The proposed antenna exhibits an 18.12 GHz impedance bandwidth between 1.88 and 20 GHz and a peak gain of 10.9 dBi. The measured E‐plane and H‐plane cross‐polarization level is −37.0 and − 26.0 dB in boresight direction, respectively. Compared to the antenna without dielectric lens, the average gain of the proposed antenna increases by 3 dB from 14 to 20 GHz, and the pulse peak‐peak gain increases by 1.59 dB, and the tailing signal levels is about 0.35 dB lower. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Design of a compact patch antenna with boresight filtering gain response.
- Author
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Liu, Yanqun, Li, Shunli, Yang, Mei, Zhao, Hongxin, and Yin, Xiaoxing
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ANTENNAS (Electronics) , *MICROSTRIP antennas , *REFLECTANCE , *WIRELESS LANs - Abstract
In this paper, a novel compact microstrip patch antenna with a boresight filtering gain response is proposed. The proposed antenna consists of a radiating patch, a ground plane, two pairs of slots respectively etched on the radiating patch and the ground plane, two shorted vias connecting the radiating patch and the ground plane. The slots on the ground plane not only provide a gain null in the lower transition band, but also introduce a new low‐resistance resonance which is beneficial to widen the impedance bandwidth. The slots on the radiating patch provide another gain null in the upper transition band. The two shorted vias are used to further adjust the reflection coefficient and the gain performance of the antenna. Since no extra circuits are introduced, the proposed antenna is compact. A prototype operating at 3.0 GHz was fabricated and measured. It demonstrates that the proposed antenna has a bandwidth of 3.5% and a gain of 6.0 dBi in a profile of 0.015 λ0. At the same time, a good filtering gain response is realized. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
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6. Sedimentary characteristics, dispersal patterns, and pathway formation in Liaoxi Sag, Liaodong Bay Depression, North China: Evolution of source‐to‐sink systems in strike‐slip tectonics belt.
- Author
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Fu, Chao, Li, Shengli, Li, Shunli, Fan, Xue, and Xu, Jianyong
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HEAVY minerals ,CLAY minerals ,SEDIMENT transport ,STRIKE-slip faults (Geology) ,BENDING stresses ,BAYS - Abstract
Liaodong Bay Depression is a strike‐slip basin with complex tectonic movement that lead the source‐to‐sink (S2S) systems evolution vary greatly in temporal and spatial characteristics. This study explored the sedimentary characteristics, dispersal patterns, and pathway formation in Liaodong Bay Depression, as well as their controlling factors. We selected more than 10 pathways with north‐west and north‐east directions in Liaoxi Sag in the western part of Liaodong Bay Depression, a typical strike‐slip bet controlled graben, to investigate their S2S system distribution. By combining seismic data, we divided the strike‐slip fault bends into three stress setting parts, namely, a central restraining bend, which is the fault translation part, and two releasing bends in the southern and northern of fault terminals. As the heavy mineral assemblage and clay content in the west side of Liaoxi Sag differs from that in the east side, we put forward an S2S index to show the sediment transport distance according to the data we have obtained. Using this index, we recovered the dispersal pattern and pathway development and speculated on the sedimentary provenance. In the restraining bend, we recognized that the pathways mainly show a symmetrical "V" or "W" shape with unclear erosion boundaries and were dominated by filling processes. Considering the heavy mineral assemblage data, we also found that the sediment provenance area decreased and the sediment provided direction transferred from the two‐side provenance to one. Combining the fast sedimentary rate calculated with clay content data, the S2S systems in this area were steep–wide–deep systems and a wide and shallow system. In the releasing bend, the pathways show an asymmetrical "V" or "W" shape and a clear erosional boundary. As shown by the heavy mineral assemblage data, the sediments from these areas mainly have a west side provenance and were deposited in the proximal area. Thus, the S2S system in this area is a kind of steep–deep system. Then, the investigation by integrated of tectonic movement and S2S geomorphic statistical parameters revealed that the elevation height of the S2S is a key factor in control pattern development. The various evolution patterns within the two different stress settings provide insights into the formation process of the S2S developed in a strike‐slip tectonic belt. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
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7. Ultra‐wideband crossover with a reversed polarity channel designed with normalized Euclid distance for fast pulse transmission.
- Author
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Zhang, Qiuyi, Li, Shunli, Yang, Mei, Yin, Xiaoxing, Zhao, Hongxin, and Liu, Leilei
- Subjects
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CHANNEL estimation , *DISTANCES , *TIME-domain analysis - Abstract
An ultra‐wideband pulse crossover with a reversed polarity channel is proposed, and a time‐domain analysis is utilized to design the crossover and estimate its performance. Two crossed channels are designed based on post‐wall slotline (PWS) and conventional slotline, and one of the two channels provides an output with reversed polarity. At the overlapping region, the PWS degrades to slotline on single layer to improve isolation between channels. Normalized Euclid distance of short pulses is utilized to evaluate the isolating and polarity reversing features of the crossover, and the matrices of normalized Euclid distance are then obtained and applied to the design procedure. The proposed crossover are modeled and fabricated for simulation and measurement, and the simulated and measured results agree well. Minimum of return loss and isolation is more than 12 dB within an ultra‐wide bandwidth from DC to 8.5 GHz. Moreover, in time domain, the proposed crossover shows good performance in pulse transmission, including high fidelity and amplitude ratio of input and output signals. The characteristics of the crossover indicate the practicability in short pulse application, and rectangular pulse transmission performance is evaluated to verify the ability. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Carbon isotope and rare earth element composition of Late Quaternary sediment gravity flow deposits on the mid shelf of East China Sea: Implications for provenance and origin of hybrid event beds.
- Author
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Shan, Xin, Shi, Xuefa, Clift, Peter D., Qiao, Shuqing, Jin, Lina, Liu, Jianxing, Fang, Xisheng, Xu, Taoyu, Li, Shunli, Kandasamy, Selvaraj, Zhao, Mengwei, Zhu, Ying, Zhang, Hui, Zhang, Dan, Wang, Huawei, Li, Yalong, Yao, Zhengquan, Wang, Sai, Xu, Jun, and Plink‐Björklund, Piret
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CARBON isotopes ,RARE earth metals ,BEDS ,TURBIDITY currents ,SEDIMENTS ,GRAVITY - Abstract
The East China Sea Shelf has an unusually wide and low gradient shelf, supplied from sediment‐charged rivers and large river delta systems, with bottom currents sweeping the sea floor and located in the path of strong typhoons. Sediment gravity flow deposits, including four hybrid event beds and a high density turbidite, are identified in a core from the mid‐shelf of the East China Sea. The hybrid event beds typically comprise three or two internal divisions from the base to the top: (i) H1, H3 and H5; or (ii) H3 and H5. Radiocarbon ages of the hybrid event beds were in the range of 3821 to 8526 yr bp. Based on correlation with surrounding cores, the hybrid events may have happened at any time between 1930 yr bp and 3890 yr bp. The δ13C values in hybrid event beds together with bathymetry data suggest local erosion on the shelf. The average δ13C value for the H1 division is similar to the H3 division in the hybrid event beds, implying that the organic matter in the H1 and H3 divisions may come from the same source area. Cross‐plots of upper continental crust normalized rare earth elements in the five units reveal that the sediment source of the four hybrid event beds and the turbidite was ultimately primarily from Korean rivers. Partial transformation from a moderate‐strength debris flow with the additional role of erosional bulking can explain occurrences of hybrid event beds on the East China Sea Shelf. The data indicate that hybrid sediment gravity flow deposits were sourced from intra‐shelf failures and subsequently transformed and deposited as hybrid event beds. The study shows that hybrid sediment gravity flows and turbidity currents may not necessarily indicate proximity to a major fluvial or deltaic system and that intra‐shelf sedimentation can be a sediment source. It is unlikely that the debris flows and turbidity currents were triggered by a hyperpycnal flow or tsunami, because both can carry continental and/or coastal signals which have not been recognized in the core. Typhoons are the probable triggering mechanism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Change from tide‐influenced deltas in a regression‐dominated set of sequences to tide‐dominated estuaries in a transgression‐dominated sequence set, East China Sea Shelf Basin.
- Author
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Li, Shunli, Yu, Xinghe, Steel, Ronald, Zhu, Xiaomin, Li, Shengli, Cao, Bing, Hou, Guowei, and Walsh, J.P.
- Subjects
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ESTUARIES , *SEDIMENTARY basins , *GEOLOGICAL basins , *COASTS , *OLIGOCENE paleontology - Abstract
The East China Sea Shelf Basin was a back‐arc basin located at the active continental margin of the western Philippine Sea Plate. This study explores facies and architectural changes from tide‐influenced deltas to tide‐dominated estuaries in transgressive–regressive cycles, as well as their controlling factors. Cores, wireline well‐logs and seismic data allow the sedimentary architectures and models of the depositional systems to be reconstructed. In the Xihu Depression of the East China Sea Shelf Basin, the stratigraphic sequences of the Eocene Pinghu Formation are interpreted to be dominated by repeated phases of deltaic progradation, but with intervening transgressive phases only thinly developed as bioturbated, open‐marine shelf deposits. The sequences of the overlying Oligocene Huagang Formation, in contrast, are interpreted as stacked, tide‐dominated estuary units, alternating with only poorly preserved regressive half‐cycles because of repeated, strong estuary down‐cutting. The intervening unconformity in the succession corresponds to the Yuquan tectonic movements, which triggered a change from extensional to compressional settings in the Xihu Depression. In the Late Eocene, extension of the Xihu Depression led to moderately high rates of subsidence (163 m Ma−1), and short‐term sea‐level falls led to multiple phases of deltaic progradations. After the Yuquan Movement, Early Oligocene compression brought overall lower rates of subsidence (110 m Ma−1), as well as sea‐level rise and stacked estuary development with significant tidal influence in the infill. The interaction of tectonics, sea‐level change and sediment supply determined the nature of the depositional systems on the shelf during the entire period, whereas the sedimentary processes were key to reworking and shaping the facies distribution, geomorphology and architectures in the back‐arc basin. This research provides an insight into spatial and temporal characterization of deltaic and estuarine systems, contributing to a better understanding of the mechanisms controlling a change in dominant coastline type, despite continued strong tidal influence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Braided–meandering system evolution in the rock record: Implications for climate control on the Middle–Upper Jurassic in the southern Junggar Basin, north‐west China.
- Author
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Tyrrell, S., Yao, Zongquan, Yu, Xinghe, Li, Shunli, Li, Shengli, Chen, Hongliang, Shan, Xin, Li, Yalong, and Tan, Chengpeng
- Subjects
ENVIRONMENTAL engineering ,GEOCHEMISTRY ,SEDIMENTARY structures ,JURASSIC stratigraphic geology ,FLUVIAL geomorphology - Abstract
This paper presents the current body of knowledge regarding the evolution of a braided–meandering system in the southern Junggar Basin, north‐west China, based on the preserved architecture evidences. The response to climate change was also discussed. Herein, 10 types of lithofacies are summarized, including information of their primary sedimentary structures, characteristic lithology, and geometry. This study focuses on recognizing the architectural elements within the channels (migrating channel: CHm, switching channel: CHs, transiting channel: CHt, and filling channel: CHf), the bar units (downstream accretion: DA, lateral accretion: LA, unit bar: UB, and compound bar: CB), and fine‐grained clastic deposits (floodplain fines: FF and overbank fines: OF). Three representative sections of outcrops were selected, and detailed observation and analysis of these sections revealed 3 stages can be divided: the braided stage, in which the deposits show an evidence of CHm, DA elements which are the mainly architectural elements, multichannel with aggradational filling; The transformation between braided–meandering stage, during which the fluvial system consists of CHt and CHm elements with lateral accretion; and meandering stage which is characterized by dominance of CHm, LA elements, and the channels become isolated and meandering. Finally, this paper concludes with an interpretation of climate events as manifested by the fluvial archives of the colours of sedimentary rocks, special mineral, palaeontology, geochemistry spanning the Middle–Upper Jurassic (between 166.1 and 152.1 Ma). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. L2-L∞ filtering for a class of stochastic nonlinear systemswith aperiodic sampling.
- Author
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Zhu, Baolong, Suo, Mingliang, Zhang, Zhiping, Li, Min, and Li, Shunli
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INFORMATION filtering ,NONLINEAR systems ,STOCHASTIC analysis ,FILTERS (Mathematics) ,APERIODICITY ,CHUA'S circuit - Abstract
Thiswork investigates the problem of L
2 -L∞ filtering for a class of stochastic nonlinear systems with nonuniform sampling. The sampled-data filter developed in this paper is an impulsive differential system whose states change abruptly at every sampling instant. The resulting filtering error system is modeled as a stochastic nonlinear impulsive differential system. The goal is to propose a method for designing a target filter that ensures the stochastic asymptotic stability of the filtering error system and guarantees a prescribed L2 -L∞ performance. Based on a time-varying Lyapunov functional, by virtue of a convex combination technique, a design method to achieve such a filter is formulated in the form of solving a set of linear matrix inequalities. The effectiveness of the proposed filtering strategy is shown via a numerical example of a stochastic Chua's circuit system. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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12. Sedimentary Patterns and Stratigraphic Trap Models of Deeply Buried Intervals in the Baxian Depression, North China.
- Author
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LI, Shengli, YU, Xinghe, ZHANG, Feng, LIANG, Xingru, LI, Shunli, HUANG, Jie, and CAO, Nanzhu
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SEDIMENTS ,STRUCTURAL geology ,SANDSTONE ,PALEOGENE ,PETROLEUM reservoirs - Abstract
The Baxian depression is a typical half-graben located in the Jizhong sub-basin, north China. Commercial petroleum traps have been discovered in the Jizhong sub-basin. However, the 3
rd and 4th members of the Shahejie Formation in this sub-basin have been poorly explored. These two members, belonging to the Lower Paleogene age, are buried deeply in the depression. Favorable petroleum reservoir conditions exist in such deep intervals of the half-graben due to the presence of different types and extent of deltas and turbidity fans in various areas. In fact, three types of turbidite fans are developed in the sag below the transitional belt on the eastern gentle slope. This work summarized three stratigraphic trap belts, i.e., the steep slope, gentle slope, and sag. On the steep slope, structural-stratigraphic traps with small-scale delta fronts and turbidite sandbodies are well developed. On the gentle slope, hydrocarbons generally accumulate in the large-scale delta front, onlapping beds and those sandbodies adjacent to unconformities. In the sag, petroleum trap models are typically characterized by pinched-out turbidite sandbodies. Stratigraphic traps were easily formed in turbidite fans below the eastern transitional belt. The petroleum traps that have already been discovered or predicted in the study area indicate that stratigraphic traps have favorable petroleum exploration potential in deeply buried areas (depth >5000 m) in a half-graben basin or depression. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. RESERVOIR POTENTIAL OF DEEP-WATER LACUSTRINE DELTA-FRONT SANDSTONES IN THE UPPER TRIASSIC YANCHANG FORMATION, WESTERN ORDOS BASIN, CHINA.
- Author
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Li, Shengli, Ma, Y. Zee, Yu, Xinghe, and Li, Shunli
- Subjects
PETROLEUM reserves ,SANDSTONE ,WATERSHEDS ,X-ray diffraction ,STRUCTURAL equation modeling - Abstract
This paper investigates the reservoir characteristics of deep-water lacustrine-delta sandstones in the Upper Triassic Yanchang Formation in the western Ordos Basin, north-central China. The Yanchang Formation has previously been interpreted as a shallow-water lacustrine deltaic succession, and this interpretation has been used to guide petroleum exploration activities which have however met with only limited success. The present study integrates thin-section, wireline log, X-ray diffraction and SEM data from wells in the western Ordos Basin to determine the sedimentary and diagenetic characteristics of sandstones in the C6 and C4+5 sub-members of the Yanchang Formation, and to interpret the units' depositional environment. The C6 and C4+5 sub-members in the study area are composed of: mudstones and fine-grained sandstones, which are interpreted as deep-water pro-delta deposits; laterally-extensive sand sheets (outer delta-front deposits); and small-scale distributary channel and mouth bar sandbodies (inner delta-front deposits). The sandstones have reservoir potential but diagenesis has had a range of effects on reservoir quality. Compaction together with cementation by calcite and clay minerals including chlorite and kaolinite may have affected pore throat geometry and permeability adversely. However dissolution of feldspars and calcite cement created secondary porosity. Hydrocarbon accumulations may occur in delta-front channel and mouth bar sandbodies. Core studies show that some sandstone intervals have relatively good reservoir properties with porosity up to 15% and permeability up to 9mD. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Identification Marks of Cretaceous Shallow-Water Delta in the Songliao Basin, China.
- Author
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ZHU, Xiaomin, LI, Shunli, ZENG, Hongliu, DONG, Yanlei, and ZHU, Shifa
- Subjects
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WATER depth , *DELTAS , *WATERSHEDS , *SEDIMENTS , *STRUCTURAL geology - Abstract
The article presents a study which aims to determine the Cretaceous shallow- water delta in the Songliao Basin, China. The study suggests that the shallow-water deltas were developed commonly in lake basins under a comparatively stable tectonic setting, shallow water depth, gentle slope having low subsidence rate, a frequently fluctuating lake level, open lake basin characteristics and sufficient sediment supply.
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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