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GeoRef Categories
Era and Period
Epoch and Age
Book Series
Date
Availability
Indian cratonic mantle beneath northern Qiangtang in eastern Tibet ca. 11 Ma Available to Purchase
Carbon cycling during the India-Asia collision revealed by δ 26 Mg–δ 66 Zn–δ 98 Mo evidence from ultrapotassic volcanoes in NW Tibet Available to Purchase
Origin of the Songpan–Garzê terrane, Tibetan Plateau: a perspective from the tectonic evolution of the Palaeo-Tethys Ocean Available to Purchase
Abstract The Songpan–Garzê terrane is the largest Triassic remnant flysch basin on Earth and formed as the Palaeo-Tethys Ocean closed during the final amalgamation of the Pangaea supercontinent. However, the origin of the Songpan–Garzê terrane is highly controversial. A synthesis of the tectonic evolution of the Palaeo-Tethys Ocean and its branches surrounding the Songpan–Garzê terrane is presented, which clarifies the nature and relationships among the many Palaeo-Tethys sutures. Provenance analyses suggest that branches of the Palaeo-Tethys near the Songpan–Garzê terrane closed before the Early Triassic. In contrast, the main Palaeo-Tethys Ocean (Longmu Co-Shuanghu) did not close until the beginning of the Late Triassic. This study argues against the Songpan–Garzê terrane being a remnant ocean basin, and proposes that it was a back-arc basin of the main Palaeo-Tethys Ocean. It initially underwent extension by the combined effects of the main Palaeo-Tethys Ocean subduction and the Emeishan mantle plume in the Late Permian, and subsequently developed into a back-arc basin in the Triassic, into which huge turbiditie units were deposited derived from all surrounding terranes and orogens. The final closure of the main Palaeo-Tethys Ocean in the beginning of the Late Triassic and subsequent continent–continent collision led to basin inversion in the Late Triassic.
Tectonic evolution of the Proto-Qiangtang Ocean and its relationship with the Palaeo-Tethys and Rheic oceans Available to Purchase
Abstract An evaluation of the potential geodynamic connections between the evolution of Paleozoic oceans in NW Gondwana and NE Gondwana is challenging. Until recently, most syntheses emphasized only two Paleozoic oceans (the Proto-Tethys and the Palaeo-Tethys) in the east Tethys realm. However, the discovery of early Paleozoic ophiolites along Palaeo-Tethys sutures located south of Proto-Tethys sutures challenges these traditional views. After a comprehensive review of relevant early Paleozoic tectonomagmatic events, we herein recognize and propose a model for the tectonic evolution of a hitherto unrecognized early Paleozoic ocean, which we call the Proto-Qiangtang Ocean. This ocean was short lived; it opened in the late Cambrian, began to subduct in the Middle Ordovician, and closed diachronously westwards between the Late Ordovician and the middle Silurian. Its closure by middle Silurian time indicates that was a spatially and temporally distinct ocean from the Palaeo-Tethys Ocean. The early tectonic evolution of the Proto-Qiangtang Ocean shares many characteristics with that of the Rheic Ocean. Both opened in the late Cambrian in the back-arc region of the Iapetus–Proto-Tethys Ocean, and the Proto-Qiangtang Ocean is considered to represent the eastern extension of the Rheic Ocean. This correlation has important implications for the Paleozoic tectonic evolution and palaeogeography of northern Gondwana.