Age, depositional environment, and tectonic significance of an Early Neoproterozoic volcano-sedimentary sequence in the eastern Beishan orogenic belt, southern Central Asian Orogenic Belt

被引:4
|
作者
Wang, Biren [1 ,2 ]
Yang, Xiaosong [1 ]
Li, Shucai [2 ]
Teng, Chao [2 ]
Yang, Xinjie [2 ]
Huang, Fuyong [2 ]
Cao, Jun [2 ]
Yang, Bing [2 ]
Zhang, Xiaofei [3 ]
Zhou, Yi [2 ]
机构
[1] China Earthquake Adm, Inst Geol, State Key Lab Earthquake Dynam, Beijing 100029, Peoples R China
[2] China Geol Survey, Cores & Samples Ctr Nat Resources, Yanjiao, Hebei, Peoples R China
[3] China Geol Survey, Dev & Res Ctr, Beijing, Peoples R China
关键词
alkali basalt; Beishan orogenic belt; Neoproterozoic; volcano-sedimentary sequence; ZIRCON U-PB; ACCRETIONARY; COLLAGE; EVOLUTION; INSIGHTS; COMPLEX;
D O I
10.1002/gj.3985
中图分类号
P [天文学、地球科学];
学科分类号
07 ;
摘要
The Beishan orogenic belt, located in the southern Central Asian Orogenic Belt, includes several discrete arc terranes. Here, we report on a newly discovered Early Neoproterozoic volcano-sedimentary sequence in the eastern Beishan orogenic belt in order to constrain the composition and origin of the Shuangyingshan-Huaniushan Terrane. The similar to 766-m-thick volcano-sedimentary sequence is very low-grade metamorphosed, and characterized by muddy and silty slate with the well-developed parallel laminations and minor thinly-bedded limestone in its lower and upper sections, and thick packages of sandstone-conglomerate and basaltic rocks in the middle section. Lava flow units in the basalt are very common, and the sandstone-conglomerate exhibits sedimentary structures typical of gravity currents, including erosional and slump features, and Bouma sequences. These features suggest that syn-sedimentary volcanism occurred and the sequence formed in an active, deep marine environment. The basalt has a zircon U-Pb age of 901 +/- 10 Ma, indicating that this sequence formed during the Early Neoproterozoic. Basalt samples have moderate SiO2 (45.33-49.18%), and high TiO2 (1.27-4.04%) contents, Mg-# values of 25-48, and plot in the alkali basalt field in the Nb/Y versus Zr/TiO2 diagram, indicative of an evolved alkali basalt magma. They show inclined chondrite-normalized REE patterns with (La/Yb)(N) ratios of 4.74-6.53, no pronounced negative Eu anomalies (Eu/Eu* = 0.87-1.22), no obvious negative Zr, Hf, Nb, and Ta anomalies in the primitive-mantle-normalized trace-element diagram, consistent with oceanic island basalts. Considered together, these lithologies resemble those of an oceanic seamount. Our results, and the presence of the previously reported Gubaoquan granitic and mafic rocks (905-865 Ma) that formed in an active continental margin setting and underwent an amphibolite-facies metamorphism, suggest that the Shuangyingshan-Huaniushan Terrane may be an accreted terrane that consists of different lithologies with various origins that formed during the Neoproterozoic.
引用
下载
收藏
页码:1346 / 1357
页数:12
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Geochronology, geochemistry, and tectonic implications of early Neoproterozoic granitic rocks from the eastern Beishan Orogenic Belt, southern Central Asian Orogenic Belt
    Wang, Biren
    Yang, Xiaosong
    Li, Shucai
    Teng, Chao
    Yang, Xinjie
    Huang, Fuyong
    Zhang, Xiaofei
    Cao, Jun
    Zhou, Yi
    Zhang, Huachuan
    Li, Jing
    PRECAMBRIAN RESEARCH, 2021, 352
  • [2] Lithofacies and chronology of volcano-sedimentary sequence in the southern Beishan Region, Central Asian Orogenic Belt and its paleogeographical implication
    Niu Y.
    Song B.
    Zhou J.
    Xu W.
    Shi J.
    Zhang Y.
    Lu J.
    Dizhi Xuebao/Acta Geologica Sinica, 2020, 94 (02): : 615 - 633
  • [3] A uniform basement: Implications for the tectonics of Beishan Orogenic Belt in the southern Central Asian Orogenic Belt
    Wang, Zhenyi
    Zhang, Jin
    Wu, Chunjiao
    Qu, Junfeng
    Zhang, Beihang
    Zhao, Heng
    Zhang, Yiping
    Yang, Yaqi
    PRECAMBRIAN RESEARCH, 2024, 404
  • [4] Geochemical and geochronological evidence for a former early Neoproterozoic microcontinent in the South Beishan Orogenic Belt, southernmost Central Asian Orogenic Belt
    Yuan, Yu
    Zong, Keqing
    He, Zhenyu
    Klemd, Reiner
    Liu, Yongsheng
    Hu, Zhaochu
    Guo, Jingliang
    Zhang, Zeming
    PRECAMBRIAN RESEARCH, 2015, 266 : 409 - 424
  • [5] Geochemical evidence for Paleozoic crustal growth and tectonic conversion in the Northern Beishan Orogenic Belt, southern Central Asian Orogenic Belt
    Yuan, Yu
    Zong, Keqing
    He, Zhenyu
    Klemd, Reiner
    Jiang, Hongying
    Zhang, Wen
    Liu, Yongsheng
    Hu, Zhaochu
    Zhang, Zeming
    LITHOS, 2018, 302 : 189 - 202
  • [6] Linking N1.4-0.8 Ga volcano-sedimentary records in eastern Central Asian orogenic belt with southern Laurentia in supercontinent cycles
    Wang, Zhiwei
    Wang, Zhihui
    Zhang, Yanjie
    Xu, Bei
    Li, Yanguang
    Tian, Yingjie
    Wang, Yicun
    Peng, Jia
    GONDWANA RESEARCH, 2022, 105 : 416 - 431
  • [7] The origin and crustal evolution of microcontinents in the Beishan orogen of the southern Central Asian Orogenic Belt
    He, Zhen-Yu
    Klemd, Reiner
    Yan, Li-Li
    Zhang, Ze-Ming
    EARTH-SCIENCE REVIEWS, 2018, 185 : 1 - 14
  • [8] Late Paleozoic subduction system in the southern Central Asian Orogenic Belt: Evidences from geochronology and geochemistry of the Xiaohuangshan ophiolite in the Beishan orogenic belt
    Zheng, Rongguo
    Wu, Tairan
    Zhang, Wen
    Xu, Cao
    Meng, Qingpeng
    JOURNAL OF ASIAN EARTH SCIENCES, 2013, 62 : 463 - 475
  • [9] Tectonic evolution of the Yaounde segment of the neoproterozoic Central African orogenic belt in southern Cameroon
    Mvondo, Hubert
    Owona, Sebastien
    Ondoa, Joseph Mvondo
    Essono, Jean
    CANADIAN JOURNAL OF EARTH SCIENCES, 2007, 44 (04) : 433 - 444
  • [10] Accretion of microcontinents and arcs in the southern Central Asian Orogenic Belt: insights from provenance analyses of early Paleozoic sedimentary records in Beishan
    Huo, Ning
    Ao, Songjian
    Xiao, Wenjiao
    Guo, Qianqian
    Mao, Qigui
    Song, Dongfang
    JOURNAL OF THE GEOLOGICAL SOCIETY, 2024, 181 (06)