The Huadong Valley or Hualien–Taitung Valley ( Chinese : 花東縱谷 ; pinyin : Huādōng Zònggǔ ; Wade–Giles : Hua-tung Tsung-ku ), also known as East Rift Valley , the Longitudinal Valley or as the Nakasendō Plain ( 中仙道平野 , Nakasendō Heiya ) during the era of Japanese rule , is a long and narrow valley located between the Central Mountain Range and the Coastal Mountain Range of eastern Taiwan , stretching about 180 km (110 mi) from Hualien City at the north to Taitung City at the south..
18-598: The valley is believed to be part of the northern terminus of the Philippine Mobile Belt , a complex collection of tectonic plate fragments and volcanic intrusions. The valley is formed by the alluvial plains of three large river systems , namely the Hualien River , Xiuguluan River and Beinan River , all of which flow into the Pacific Ocean . The Huadong Highway , a section of Provincial Highway No. 9 , runs
36-551: Is associated with the northward movement of the belt. The island of Luzon is bisected by the braided N–S trending Philippine fault system . Luzon is not bisected E-W, and illustrations showing anything similar are erroneous. Northern Luzon is integral with southern Luzon. Any suggestion that Northern Luzon is not part of the Philippine Mobile Belt is not borne out by the detailed fault mapping of Pinet and Stephan (1989), and others. A common tectonic plate illustration for
54-706: Is bounded by the Philippine Sea plate to the east, the Molucca Sea Collision Zone to the south, Sunda plate to the southwest, and the South China Sea Basin to the west and north-west. To the north it ends in eastern Taiwan , the zone of active collision between the North Luzon Trough portion of the Luzon Volcanic Arc and South China. The Philippine Mobile Belt has also been called
72-603: Is still colliding with the Sierra Madre of eastern Luzon. To the north the Philippine Mobile Belt ends in Taiwan, where accreted portions of the Luzon Arc and Luzon forearc form the eastern Coastal Range and the inland Longitudinal Valley of Taiwan, respectively. To the south the Philippine Mobile Belt terminates in the Molucca Sea Collision Zone , which is itself part of the elongated zone of convergence extending north through
90-408: Is the northern portion of the Luzon Arc but do not present current volcanic activity. Its geology is mainly composed of a Miocene volcanic basement covered by a thick (ca.4-6km) sedimentary pile of deep to shallow marine clastic deposits mostly derived from the adjacent Central Range mountains to the west. The Huadong Valley , the result of the collision of two tectonic plates , is at the west end of
108-825: The Negros Trench and the Cotabato Trench , which subducts the Sunda plate under the Philippine Mobile Belt. To the east is the Philippine Trench and its northern associate, the East Luzon Trench which subducts Philippine Sea plate the Philippine Mobile Belt. The continuity of the Philippine-East Luzon Trench is interrupted and displaced by Benham Plateau on the Philippine Sea plate, which collided and
126-756: The Philippine Microplate and the Taiwan–Luzon–Mindoro Belt . Palawan with the Calamian Islands and the Sulu Archipelago with the Zamboanga Peninsula of western Mindanao are the tops of two protruding north-eastern arms of the Sunda plate . They are not part of the Philippine Mobile Belt but are in collision with it. The Sulu Trench marks the boundary of the Sulu micro-block with
144-637: The Philippines . It includes two subduction zones, the Manila Trench to the west and the Philippine Trench to the east, as well as the Philippine fault system . Within the Belt, a number of crustal blocks or microplates which have been shorn off the adjoining major plates are undergoing massive deformation. Most segments of the Philippines , including northern Luzon , are part of the Philippine Mobile Belt, which
162-786: The intrusive rocks are dioritic in composition, although alkali rocks also occur. In the Central Cordillera of Luzon, intrusive rocks include Paleogene rocks related to an ancient arc and Neogene intrusive and volcanic rocks related to eastward subduction from the Manila Trench. In Visayas, oldest known magmatic rocks in the Philippines are found in Cebu Island, where dioritic rocks have been dated at Lower Cretaceous (Walther and others, 1981), similar rocks have been recognized in neighboring Bohol Island. In Mindanao, interpretation of
180-526: The Central Philippines four principal blocks have been identified: Panay, Mindoro, Cebu and Bohol. In Mindanao six principal blocks have been identified: Pacific Cordillera, Surigao, Pujada peninsular, Central Cordillera of Mindanao, Daguma range and Zamboanga. In Luzon, the Middle Oligocene to Late Miocene age of the arc is well constrained stratigraphically as well as radiometrically. Most of
198-577: The Philippines is incorrect in this regard. The composition of the Philippine Mobile Belt is generally interpreted as a collage of a large variety of blocks or terrane of diverse origin amalgamated before collision with the Eurasian margin. Seven principal blocks have been identified in Luzon: the Sierra Madre Oriental, Angat, Zambales , Central Cordillera of Luzon, Bicol and Catanduanes Island blocks. In
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#1732854752131216-774: The Philippines into Taiwan. Within the Molucca Sea Collision Zone, the Molucca Sea plate has been totally subsumed by the arc-arc collision of the Halmahera Arc and the Sangihe Arc of eastern Indonesia. The belt's basement rock complex consists of oceanic crust from the Philippine Sea plate , including ophiolites in North Luzon, or continental crust from the Sunda plate . On top of which are Cretaceous to Quaternary magmatic arcs. These magmatic arcs are exposed in
234-714: The Sulu Sea basin and the Palawan micro-block. The inactive Palawan Trench marks the subduction boundary between the Palawan microblock and the Spratly Islands plateau of the South China Sea basin. The Palawan/Calamian arm was also known in 1981 as the Palawan block and Palawan microcontinent, and in 1989 as the Palawan Micro-Block. The Philippine Mobile Belt is bounded on the west by the Manila Trench and its associates
252-591: The age of these rocks is further complicated by their petrographic diversity. Sajona and others (1993) analyzed Pliocene-Pleistocene adakitic rocks in Zamboanga Peninsula and mention a possible association with activity along the Philippine Fault in Surigao and northern Davao . The distribution of Philippine Pliocene-Quaternary volcanoes generally reflects the activity along subduction zones presently bounding
270-543: The archipelago. The archipelago has 16 sedimentary basins formed by tectonic processes. Here are the following sedimentary basins: Haian Range The Coastal Mountain Range , also known as the Hai'an Range ( Chinese : 海岸山脈 ; pinyin : Hǎi'àn Shānmài ), is a mountain range situated on the eastern coast of the island of Taiwan , and spans the border between Hualien and Taitung Counties. The Coastal Mountain Range
288-498: The entire length of the valley from north to south. This article about a location in Taiwan is a stub . You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it . Philippine Mobile Belt In the geology of the Philippines, the Philippine Mobile Belt is a complex portion of the tectonic boundary between the Eurasian plate and the Philippine Sea plate , comprising most of the country of
306-522: The range, and the tallest peak of the range is Xingangshan (新港山), which stands 1,682 m (5,518 ft) tall. Currently those peaks are still rising with an annual speed of 3 mm. The Hai'an Range is also converging with Central Mountain Range with an average speed of 2.3 cm per year. There are several small basins located around the range, the largest of which is Taiyuan Basin . 23°18′N 121°24′E / 23.3°N 121.4°E / 23.3; 121.4 This article about
324-470: The western Central Cordillera , and the northern Sierra Madre . The Cagayan River Basin is an intra-arc rift . Subduction of Late Oligocene to Early Miocene South China sea oceanic crust occurs at the Manila Trench. Subduction of Eocene Philippine Sea oceanic crust occurs at the East Luzon Trough – Philippine Trench system. The strike-slip , left lateral fault , Philippine fault system
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