Abstract

ABSTRACT The Tianshan Orogenic Belt underwent a series of complex tectonic changes from the Late Palaeozoic to the Cenozoic, providing key insights into the evolution of the Central Asian Orogenic Belt (CAOB). The continuous Permo-Triassic sedimentary records of the Turpan Basin are among the best archives of the tectonic evolution of the Tianshan Orogenic Belt. However, the evolution of the Turpan Basin during this period is poorly understood. Using detrital zircon U-Pb chronology and geochemistry, we reconstructed the source-to-sink system changes and the basinal tectonic evolution in the Permo-Triassic, thus providing new evidence of its tectonic evolution. Our results show that the Early-Middle Permian source-to-sink systems of the Turpan Basin were mainly proximal and constrained by horst and graben landforms due to internal extension formed in the back-arc setting during accretionary orogenesis in Central Asia. In the Late Permian-Early Triassic, exotic sources, including the North Tianshan and Yili Block-Central Tianshan, dominated the source-to-sink system, which suggests that rifts were infilled and expanded across the entire thermal sag basin. In the Middle-Late Triassic, the sediment sources diversified, with external and internal provenances revealing that a foreland basin formed with thrusting at the southern margin, and the intraplate-associated Bogda forebulge experienced initial uplift, signifying that the CAOB gradually changed from an accretionary to an extrusive orogeny. The three evolutionary episodes of the Turpan Basin implicated the long-lasting effect of the orogenic process from the final closure of Palaeo-Asian Ocean to the following build-up of the CAOB.

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