Gondwana Research | 2021

A late Paleozoic extension basin constrained by sedimentology and geochronology in eastern Central Asia Orogenic Belt

 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


Abstract According to sedimentary structure, petrology and sequence analysis from seven sections (S1–S7) across the West Ujimqin basin, the late Carboniferous to Permian sedimentary facies have been recognized and summarized as four sedimentary systems, i.e. the late Carboniferous-early Permian sedimentary system (SA) comprising the alluvial fan–delta–littoral facies, the late Carboniferous sedimentary system (SB) including the littoral facies–delta facies–platform margin facies, the early Permian sedimentary system (SC) characterized by delta front and prodelta facies, and the middle Permian sedimentary system (SD) with alternations of littoral and delta facies. According to the spatial and temporal distribution of the four sedimentary systems, the basin filling process can be divided into three stages. The first stage (324–290\xa0Ma) is dominated by bidirectional terrigenous sediments containing the SA from alluvial fan to delta and littoral facies in the northwestern and the SB from littoral–delta to platform margin facies in the southern, respectively. The second stage (290–270\xa0Ma) is characterized by delta front and prodelta facies of the SC marked by thick-bedded matrix-supported conglomerate, rapid accumulation of terrigenous sediments and volcanic debris, syn-sedimentary deformation and slump. The third stage (270–255\xa0Ma) formed the SD with the alternations of littoral and delta facies, which is represented by complex terrigenous clasts and intra-basin carbonate. These shallow and proximal sedimentary systems from fan delta to littoral facies indicate that there was not oceanic sedimentary system in the eastern CAOB during the late Carboniferous to Permian except for some small red sea basins, which provides convictive evidence that the Paleo-Asian Ocean (PAO) had closed before the late Carboniferous. Detrital zircon dating reveals bidirectional provenances of the West Ujimqin basin, indicating that it was a limited basin between two uplifts, which implies presence of the late Paleozoic “basin and uplift” tectonic framework that developed on the eastern CAOB during the late Paleozoic.

Volume None
Pages None
DOI 10.1016/j.gr.2020.10.005
Language English
Journal Gondwana Research

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