Abstract

The global transition between the Precambrian and Phanerozoic eons in concert with rise in eustatic sea-level caused an important change in paleoenvironments, represented by sedimentary records above the Great Unconformity. In the Sino-Korean Block, Gondwana, the unconformity has been recognized by a boundary between various basement rocks and the overlying distinctive suite of sandstone (including conglomerate, conglomeratic sandstone, and mudstone) of the early Cambrian age. A plate tectonic reconstruction of the Cambrian-Ordovician succession in the northeast Asian continent reveals that the sandstone deposited largely in the eastern part of the platform (North China Platform), including the Taebaeksan and Pyeongnam basins. In the western part of the platform, the basal sandstone is correlated to basal carbonate rocks of middle Cambrian age, forming a time-transgressive or diachronous unconformity. The disparity in sedimentary facies of the basal deposits overlying the Great Unconformity was primarily due to antecedent topography of the bounding continent: in the eastern platform, the drainage area comprised high-relief Precambrian massifs, whereas in the western part, it comprised low-relief massifs. During the initial stage of sea-level rise, the eastern part of the platform formed progressively open shoreface and foreshore environments with localized embayments in which relatively coarse-grained gravelly sandstone deposited in fan-delta and tide-dominated environments. In the western platform, however, the supply of siliciclastic sediments was limited and the sandstone formed a relatively narrow linear belt of delta and distributary mouth bars and foreshore deposits. In the rest of the platform farther west, accommodation created by subsequent sea-level rise was filled with carbonate sediments. This study demonstrates that antecedent topography of the unsubmerged drainage area played a major role for the deposition of sandstone in the initial transgression stage, forming the Great Unconformity.

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