Abstract

The phases of tectonic activity and exhumation of the southern margin of the Junggar Basin during the Cretaceous through Cenozoic shows significant relationships with the timing of uranium mineralization episodes. To clarify the succession of metallogenetic stages that were controlled by different phases of uplift and exhumation, apatite fission track (AFT) thermochronology was performed on the Jurassic through Cenozoic sediments from the Manas section in the southern Junggar Basin. The mean ages of the AFT suites range from 63 Ma to 133 Ma, and are younger than the host sediment for the Mesozoic samples and older than the host for the Cenozoic samples. The mean track lengths (MTLs) are between 10 and 11 μm. These results indicate that most of the apatite grain assemblages in these samples experienced complicated annealing histories. AFT ages were combined with thermal history modeling to unravel the timing of the multi-phase regional uplift and exhumation history and to reveal the tectonic constraints on the uranium mineralization. The populations of AFT single-grain ages display four peaks, which are interpreted as regional uplift and cooling episodes: mid-Early Jurassic (189–180 Ma), late Jurassic–early Cretaceous (157–116 Ma), late Cretaceous–early Paleocene (88–59 Ma) and late Eocene–early Oligocene (37–28 Ma). Thermal history modeling indicates two episodes of rapid cooling of the basin sediment deposits during the late Cretaceous–Paleocene (80–50 Ma) and the Pliocene (5 Ma)–Present. A synthesis of the temporal relationship between AFT age peaks, of the modeled time–temperature paths, of a compilation of age data and regional geologic events from the Tianshan mountain belt, suggests a close relationship between tectonic evolution and uranium mineralization. Uranium metallogenesis episodes occurred in conjunction with tectonic uplift and exhumation episodes along the southern margin of the Junggar Basin during the late Cretaceous–early Paleogene and during the latest Miocene-Present. The earlier episode was the primary mineralization stage, and the later episode was a partial transformation stage superimposed on the earlier one.

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