Abstract
The Sanmenxia Basin, located on the southeastern margin of the Shanxi rift and filled with Cretaceous-Paleogene fluvial and lacustrine sediments, is a faulted basin bounded by a series of normal strike-slip faults. This provides a valuable opportunity to investigate the early tectonic deformation in the Fenwei graben. In this study, we report an integrated rock magnetism and AMS analysis of two sections from the Sanmenxia Basin spanning an interval from the Late Cretaceous to the Eocene. The rock magnetic results demonstrate that magnetite and hematite are the main magnetic carriers of remanence, and paramagnetic minerals and hematite are major contributors to the AMS in both sections of the Sanmenxia Basin. Together with the relatively low-corrected anisotropy values, the tightly grouped minimum principal axes are almost perpendicular to the bedding plane, and the well-defined magnetic lineation is generally parallel to the bedding trend, indicating that the primary sedimentary fabrics in the Sanmenxia Basin were overprinted by the initial deformation. The NW–SE magnetic lineation denotes the NW–SE stretching during the Late Cretaceous-Eocene. The stretching process may have been controlled by the Indian-Eurasian convergence and/or the subduction of the western Pacific plate.
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