Based on data on the geochemical characteristics ((La/Yb)N, Eu/Eu* and content of Th) of clay rocks of Podolian Transnistria, South-Eastern Poland, Belarus and Volyn, Lithuania, the vicinity of St. Petersburg, South-Eastern White Sea region and Arctic Norway, categories of rivers that transported fine-grained aluminosiliconclastics to sinks that existed during the Vendian and Early Cambrian were reconstructed in the west of the East European Platform. The distribution of data points of clay rocks of the Volynian time on the (La/Yb)N–Eu/Eu* diagram with the fields of the composition of pelitic fraction of bottom sediments in the estuary of modern rivers of various categories allows us to assume that for Lithuania and Podolian Transnistria the feeding provinces were, among other things, paleowatersheds composed of volcanic formations. For Eastern Belarus and the South-Eastern White Sea region, the influence of erosion products supplied by rivers flowing through igneous/metamorphic terranes (crystalline basement) is noticeable. A significant part of the clastic material was carried by rivers that drained sedimentary formations, as well as large rivers, i.e. rivers whose length exceeded 1000 km and whose drainage area was more than 100,000 km2. The existence of the latter is confirmed by the presence of detrital zircon in the rocks of the Zhukov Formation of South-Eastern Poland, borrowed possibly from the rocks of Fennoscandia. In the Redkinian time, along with large rivers (rivers category 1) and rivers fed by the products of erosion of sedimentary formations (rivers category 2), transport of fine-grained clastics was also carried out by rivers that drained rocks of the crystalline basement ((rivers category 3; this is typical of Belarus and Volyn, the South-Eastern White Sea and Arctic Norway) and by rivers flowing through areas of distribution of volcanic associations (rivers category 4). The distribution of data points of the clay rocks of the Kotlin stage on the (La/Yb)N–Eu/Eu* diagram suggests that the main agents of transport of fine-grained aluminosiliconclastics to sinks at that time were large rivers and rivers fed by fine particulate matter due to the erosion of predominantly sedimentary rocks. The Early Cambrian paleowatersheds were apparently composed not only of crystalline rocks, but also of sedimentary formations. All of the above is in fairly good agreement with the previously established fact of a gradual increase in the contribution of erosion products of sedimentary rocks to the formation of Vendian–Early Cambrian sedimentary sequences from Podolian Transnistria to Arctic Norway.
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