Provenance analysis of the Cretaceous Laiyang Group on Lingshan Island (western Yellow Sea, China) and its tectono-sedimentary implications

Longstanding debates on the tectonic setting and provenance of the Lower Cretaceous Lingshandao Formation have hindered basin analysis and tectonic studies of the collision of the Yangtze Craton and the North China Craton, and thus the evolution of the Sulu Orogen. Thin-section analysis, identificat...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Australian journal of earth sciences Vol. 67; no. 3; pp. 361 - 377
Main Authors: Fan, A. P., Sun, S. N., Yang, R. C., Zhang, Z., De, S., Nenzhelele, J. D. N., Li, Y., Liu, H. P., Zhou, Y. Q., Yuan, J.
Format: Journal Article
Language:English
Published: Hoboken Taylor & Francis 02-04-2020
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Summary:Longstanding debates on the tectonic setting and provenance of the Lower Cretaceous Lingshandao Formation have hindered basin analysis and tectonic studies of the collision of the Yangtze Craton and the North China Craton, and thus the evolution of the Sulu Orogen. Thin-section analysis, identification of rock particles, cathodoluminescence, heavy minerals and trace-element analysis have, in addition to field investigations, been applied to reconstruct the source area and transport pathways of the sediments that build the Lower Cretaceous Laiyang Group on the Lingshan Island, western Yellow Sea. These analyses indicate that the Laiyang Group consists mainly of material derived from a recycled orogen and from transitional continental sediments. The Laiyang Group on Lingshan Island has been sourced from igneous and metamorphic rocks. Comparing analyses of detrital minerals with rocks from surrounding areas leads to the conclusion that the main source area is the Sulu Orogen that supplied sediment to rift basin rather than a residual basin between the Yangtze Craton and the North China Craton. A recycled orogenic belt is the source area for the Laiyang Group on Linshan Island. Felsic metamorphic and igneous rocks form the most probable sources. The rift basin was filled by sediments supplied from the Sulu Orogen on both sides.
ISSN:0812-0099
1440-0952
DOI:10.1080/08120099.2019.1661285