Abstract

The eastern Central Asian Orogenic Belt (CAOB) encompasses a vast region from northeast China to Inner Mongolia, where there were many Late Paleozoic sedimentary basins that can provide key constraints to tectonic evolution of the eastern CAOB. Analysis of sedimentary sequence and environment of eight measured sections from the Linxi basin, Inner Mongolia indicates that there were shallow marine clastic-carbonate sedimentary facies, delta and littoral facies and terrestrial facies during the Early, Middle and Late Permian, respectively, and no oceanic sedimentary facies was found. Sedimentary sequence from the initial clastic-carbonate rocks to marine volcanic rocks reveals a transgression process during 300–270 Ma, while clastic and carbonate rocks with conglomerates and plant fossils represent a regression process during 270–250 Ma. According to the detrital zircon (DZ) age distribution of twenty-two samples (1610 zircons), the northern and southern provenances of the Permian sedimentary strata have been recognized, respectively. These DZ samples express the dispersed polymodal age populations and are attributed to a divergent dominated tectonic setting, implying the Linxi basin is an intracontinental extension basin during the Permian. This is consistent with an extensional process revealed by the syn-depositional deformed structures, coarse clastic sediments and olistostrome successions in the Linxi basin during the Early to Middle Permian and also similar to the speculation that there was an extension setting based on studies of volcanic rocks and intrusions in the Linxi basin. Combined with previous studies on the West Ujimqin basin, the Late Carboniferous to Permian tectonic frame of the eastern Inner Mongolia expresses extensional tectonics characterized by alternating combination of basins and uplifts superimposed on a pre-existing Early-Middle Paleozoic orogenic lithosphere and Precambrian basement, rather than a single ocean basin of Paleo Asian Ocean (PAO), which provides constraints for understanding sedimentary and tectonic evolution of the eastern CAOB during the Late Paleozoic.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call