Abstract
The Yangtianba Formation in the northwestern Bikou Terrane preserves sedimentary archives for the Early to Middle Neoproterozoic tectonic evolution of the northwestern margin of the Yangtze Block (YB). However, its provenance and depositional mechanism are still matter of debates. This paper presents geochronological and petrographic studies of two granite gravel samples and one coarse-grained sandstone sample as well as facies analysis of the conspicuous Yangtianba Formation conglomerates (YFC). The weighted average 206Pb/238U ages of the two granite gravels are 743 ± 6 Ma and 762 ± 4 Ma, respectively. The detrital zircon U-Pb ages of the sandstone sample peak at ca. 880 to 740 Ma, close to the depositional age of the Yangtianba Formation. Together with the dominantly angular to subangular morphology and clear oscillatory or broad zoning of these detrital zircons, the Yangtianba Formation is likely sourced from the Early to Middle Neoproterozoic igneous rocks. Facies analysis of the YFC shows they are stacked bundles of fining- and thinning-upward units of conglomerates-sandstone, suggesting a decreasing supply of coarse clastic materials from the episodic mass flow (debris flow) in the submarine channels rather than tillites. Combining with the previous work, the Yangtianba Formation probably mainly sourced from the Neoproterozoic igneous rocks in the Micangshan-Hannan area in the northwestern margin of the YB and is subaqueous sediment gravity flow deposits rather than glacial-marine deposits. These findings favor the model that the northwestern margin of the YB may be an active continental margin setting during the Early- to Middle- Neoproterozoic (ca. 835 to 720 Ma).
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