Abstract

Redox conditions and primary productivity are proposed to be the major controls of organic matter accumulation in sediments. Studies of the impacts of tectonic processes on organic matter accumulation are still limited. We took the Late Permian-Early Triassic Western Hubei Basin, located in the north of South China, as an example. In black shales in the Dalong Formation, bottom-water redox conditions and surface-water productivity are constrained as shown by the analysis of total organic carbon (TOC) as well as geochemical (enrichment of Mo, U, Ni, Cd and Zn) and mineralogical characteristics. The highest productivity is present in the lower Dalong Formation, and the most intensively anoxic and restricted conditions are found in the middle Dalong Formation. The correlation of the sedimentary successions on the two sides of the basin's boundary fault indicates a subsidence of the basement during the deposition of the lower-middle Dalong Formation, followed by an uplift during the deposition of the upper Dalong Formation. When looked at in conjunction with the tectonic background of the basin, the new data in the present study support that: (1) the collision of the South and North China plates controlled the paleoceanographic and hydrographic evolution of the Western Hubei Basin, as well as organic matter accumulation in sediments; (2) upwelling-induced high productivity and good preservation in an anoxic environment jointly contributed to organic matter enrichment in the lower Dalong Formation, while good preservation in an anoxic environment was the major cause of organic matter enrichment in the middle-upper Dalong Formation. This study indicates that tectonism can act as the ultimate drive mechanism for organic matter accumulation in black shales. Our data also suggest that plate tectonism in related to the assembly of East Asian blocks with the main body of Pangea can also be treated as one of the ultimate drive mechanisms of the end-Permian mass extinction as it created the restricted, anoxic Paleo-Tethys Ocean, which greatly disturbed- global seawater circulation.

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