Abstract

Late Cenozoic orogen-derived sediments recorded in the pro- and retro-foreland basins on both sides of the Taiwan orogenic wedge provide important constraints on sediment provenance evolution, and further outline the exhumation and erosion histories of the orogenic belt. We present 172 sandstone petrographic data from seven representative regions on the pro- and retro-foreland basins, which we coupled with previous thermochronological data from the pro-wedge of the Hsuehshan Range and the retro-wedge of the Backbone Range to elucidate the source-sink relationships between a source orogenic wedge and its associated foreland basin. Our data analysis and estimation provide evidence that the initial depositional age of orogen-derived sediments in pro- and retro-foreland basins is consistent with the exhumation and erosion histories of the adjacent orogen, indicating that the Backbone and Hsuehshan Ranges started to build up at ~12 and 5–6 Ma, respectively. The diachronous onset of orogenic sediment deposition and orogenic uplift also suggest a tendency for progressively southward and westward migration of the foreland basin, and asymmetric exhumation and erosion of the orogenic wedge over time due to oblique collision. The timing of the onset of the Taiwan orogeny formed the retro-wedge of the Backbone Range at ~12 Ma, which is much older than the previously determined onset age of Taiwan mountain building of ~6 Ma. We divide the Taiwan orogenic evolution into two stages: the first stage comprises the extrusion and exhumation of the subduction wedge formed as the Yuli Belt of the Backbone Range prior to the collision during the middle Miocene. The second stage comprises the arc-continent collision, producing doubly vergent orogenic wedge extrusion, leading to a diachronous uplift history of the Hsuehshan and Backbone Ranges since late Miocene.

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