Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://bura.brunel.ac.uk/handle/2438/25640
Title: The Ordovician Retroarc Foreland Basin on the Yangtze Block Linked to the Final Assemblage of Gondwana
Authors: Tang, H
Xu, Q
Li, S
Li, L
Wang, X
Tan, X
Zheng, J
Kershaw, S
Yang, X
Issue Date: 29-Oct-2022
Publisher: GeoScienceWorld
Citation: Tang, H., Xu, Q., et al. (2022). 'The Ordovician Retroarc Foreland Basin on the Yangtze Block Linked to the Final Assemblage of Gondwana' in Lithosphere. Vol. 2022 (1). pp.1-18. https://doi.org/10.2113/2022/8698933.
Abstract: Amalgamation of the Yangtze and Cathaysia blocks in the context of Gondwana assembly in the early Paleozoic has been addressed for decades, but the far-field effects on the Yangtze Block during the amalgamation remain unclear. In this study, we outline the sequence stratigraphic framework of the Ordovician succession in the central-upper Yangtze Block and analyze provenance records in sandstone compositions, distributions, and detritus zircon U-Pb dating. The Ordovician succession in the central-upper Yangtze Block is subdivided into six third-order sequences, which were deposited mainly in a carbonate platform with restricted sediments in Tremadocian to early Floian stages, mixed terrigenous-carbonate deposits in mid- to late Floian stages, and open circulation sediments in Dapingian to middle Katian stages. These sequences show the central-upper Yangtze Block experienced syn-tectonic deformation with northeast-trending long-wavelength uplift and depression alternatively and the depocenter shifting from the east during Tremadocian to mid-Floian stages to the southwest in late Floian to early Hirnantian stages. Provenance data indicate that detritus in the Ordovician succession was mainly from the northern India and Kangdian paleohighland to the southwest of South China Block. Incorporating the depositional and deformation variations, we propose a retroarc foreland basin that was developed on the South China Block in response to final suturing between the South China Block and East Gondwana at Sanya suture zone. The South China Block was thus involved in the global tectonics of the Gondwana supercontinental cycle during the Ordovician.
URI: http://bura.brunel.ac.uk/handle/2438/25640
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.2113/2022/8698933
ISSN: 1941-8264
Appears in Collections:Dept of Life Sciences Research Papers

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