Abstract

Four Tethyan ocean basins are recognised in Asia, the Proto-Tethys (Late Proterozoic - Silurian), Palaeo-Tethys (Middle Devonian - Late Triassic), Meso-Tethys (Middle Permian - Late Cretaceous) and Ceno-Tethys (late Middle Triassic - Eocene). Multi-disciplinary data, including ages of pelagic sediments, ocean plate stratigraphy, seamounts, ophiolites, blueschists, eclogites in accretionary complexes, volcanic arc and magmatic rocks found along suture zones of the Tethyan oceans are described and used to date the opening and closure of these oceans. The evolution of the Tethyan ocean basins in Asia illustrates that Asia has been a giant convergent zone for more than 500 million years and the Phanerozoic construction and evolution of Asia involved the opening and closure of Tethyan ocean basins and the collision and accretion of Gondwana-derived continental blocks and the Indian Craton. Subduction processes, arc and back-arc basin generation, and continent-continent and arc-continent collisions led to the principal orogenic events, basin development and related mineral and energy resource deposits recorded in Asia. Three major orogenic belts are recognised in Asia, the Central Asian Orogenic Belt, that relates to the evolution of the Palaeo-Asia Ocean, and the Tethyan (Tethysides) Orogenic Belt and the Alpine-Himalayan Orogenic Belt which relate to the evolution of Tethyan ocean basins. The principal Tethyan basin related orogenies in Asia are the Bhimphedian Orogeny (Ordovician-Silurian) that reflects the collision of major Asian continental blocks (“Asian-Hun Superterrane”) with Gondwana, the Indosinian (Cimmerian) Orogeny (Permian-Triassic) resulting from Palaeo-Tethyan subduction processes, collisions of Asian blocks and collision of the Cimmerian continent with Asia, and the Himalayan-Tibetan Orogeny (Cretaceous-Palaeogene) caused by subduction of the Meso- and Ceno-Tethys oceans and the Lhasa-Asia and India-Asia collisions.

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