53–43 Ma Deformation of Eastern Tibet Revealed by Three Stages of Tectonic Rotation in the Gongjue Basin

Yang Zhang, Wentao Huang*, Baochun Huang, Douwe J.J. van Hinsbergen, Tao Yang, Guillaume Dupont-Nivet, Zhaojie Guo

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

The Gongjue basin from the eastern Qiangtang terrane is located in the transition region where the regional structural lineation curves from east-west-oriented in Tibet to north-south-oriented in Yunnan. In this study, we sampled the red beds in the basin from the lower Gongjue to upper Ranmugou formations for the first time covering the entire stratigraphic profile. The stratigraphic ages are bracketed within 53–43 Ma by new detrital zircon U-Pb ages constraining the maximum deposition age to 52.5 ± 1.5 Ma. Rock magnetic and petrographic studies indicate that detrital magnetite and hematite are the magnetic carriers. Positive reversals and fold tests demonstrate that the characteristic remanent magnetization has a primary origin. The Gongjue and Ranmugou formations yield mean characteristic remanent magnetization directions of Ds/Is = 31.0°/21.3° and Ds/Is = 15.9°/22.0°, respectively. The magnetic inclination of these characteristic remanent magnetizations is significantly shallowed compared to the expected inclination for the locality. However, the elongation/inclination correction method does not provide a meaningful correction, likely because of syn-depositional rotation. Rotations relative to the Eurasian apparent polar wander path occurred in three stages: Stage I, 33.3 ± 3.4° clockwise rotation during the deposition of the Gongjue and lower Ranmugou formations; Stage II, 26.9 ± 3.7° counterclockwise rotation during deposition of the lower and middle Ranmugou formation; and Stage III, 17.7 ± 3.3° clockwise rotation after 43 Ma. The complex rotation history recorded in the basin is possibly linked to sinistral shear along the Qiangtang block during India indentation into Asia and the early stage of the extrusion of the northwestern Indochina blocks away from eastern Tibet.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)3320-3338
Number of pages19
JournalJournal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth
Volume123
Issue number5
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 May 2018

Funding

W. H. was supported by the Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO) with a Rubicon grant (825.15.016). D. J. J. v. H. was funded through NWO VIDI grant 864.11.004. G. D.-N. acknowledges funding from the ANR DSP-Tibet and ERC 649081 (MAGIC) grants. Z. G. was supported by China National Science and Technology Major Project (no. 2017ZX05008001). We are grateful to Yo-ichiro Otofuji, an anon ymous reviewer, and the Associate Editor Mark J. Dekkers for their con structive comments and suggestions.

Keywords

  • eastern Qiangtang terrane
  • Gongjue basin
  • inclination shallowing
  • paleomagnetism
  • rotation

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