Abstract

Detrital single-mineral geochemistry and geochronology are strong tools in provenance studies and indicate great potentials in addressing issues in earth sciences. Various biases (both natural and artificial) exist objectively and may mislead provenance interpretations. Both the sedimentary sorting process and hand-picking in-laboratory processing may lead to analyzed grain textural (e.g., size and shape) variability and thus may introduce biases in single-mineral provenance analysis. Here, we take the Mesozoic–Cenozoic Qaidam basin, northeastern Tibet, as an example to investigate the relationship between single-mineral grain texture and detrital zircon geochronological and detrital tourmaline, rutile and garnet geochemical data and to explain how grain texture affects detrital single-mineral provenance interpretations. Results indicate that Precambrian zircons take less proportions in coarse (>125 μm), subrounded and high aspect ratio (>2) fractions than Phanerozoic zircons. Parent rock lithology discrimination results of detrital tourmaline and garnet in different grain size fractions show significant differences. Zr-temperature values of detrital rutile have an increasing trend with increasing grain size. The geochemistry of detrital tourmaline, rutile and garnet shows no dependence with grain aspect ratio and roundness. We suggest that inheritance of grain texture features from parent rocks is the major reason. Detrital zircons from recycled (meta)sedimentary rocks tend to be smaller and more rounded than those from igneous rocks. Detrital tourmaline, rutile and garnet grains from different parent rock types vary in size. Grain textural bias may cause the underestimated contributions of the Qilian Shan to the Cenozoic Qaidam basin if small detrital zircons were not involved in the analysis. Quantitative description of the source-to-sink system of the Cenozoic Qaidam is also influenced by grain textural bias. This study highlights the underestimated grain textural bias in single-mineral provenance studies. We suggest that a comprehensive understanding of potential sedimentary sources, depositional processes, sample petrographic features and laboratory analysis procedures is important to reliable provenance interpretations and to related implications in earth sciences.

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