The Early Cretaceous tectonic deformation stages and detrital zircon U-Pb ages of Pingshanhu Basin in Hexi Corridor
Author:
Affiliation:

Clc Number:

P542;P597

Fund Project:

  • Article
  • |
  • Figures
  • |
  • Metrics
  • |
  • Reference
  • |
  • Related
  • |
  • Cited by
  • |
  • Materials
  • |
  • Comments
    Abstract:

    Pingshanhu basin, located in the north of Hexi Corridor, is bounded by the Longshou Mountain in the south, the Beida Mountain in the north, and Heli Mountain in the west. The deposition and evolution of Pingshanhu basin were controlled by overthrust fault in the Early Cretaceous. In this paper, the authors deepened the study of the Early Cretaceous Miaogou Group, mainly about the geometry of the basin, the tectonic stress field and detrital zircon. The authors made a detail discussion on the tectonic evolution of Pingshanhu Basin. In Pingshanhu Basin, Miaogou Group exhibits an upward-fining sedimentary sequence. The tectonic deformation is dominated by NE-SW trending compression and E-W trending extension. The latest zircon age is (129.3±1.8) Ma, which may represent the earlieset time of the upper rock formation and the formation age of graben. On the basis of the sedimentary facies of Early Cretaceous Miaogou Group, the tectonic style, tectonic stress field and zircon ages of clastic rocks, the authors hold that Pingshanhu Basin was a compressional basin in the early Early Cretaceous. The growth strata restricted the compressional structure ages. It was an extensional rifted basin in late Early Cretaceous. The conversion time was posterior to 129.3 Ma.

    Reference
    Related
    Cited by
Get Citation

SHAO Haohao, CHEN Xuanhua, ZHANG Da, SHAO Zhaogang, LI Bing, WANG Zengzhen, ZHANG Yiping, XU Shenglin, SHI Jianjie, MIAO Huixin. The Early Cretaceous tectonic deformation stages and detrital zircon U-Pb ages of Pingshanhu Basin in Hexi Corridor[J]. Geology in China, 2019, 46(5): 1079-1093(in Chinese with English abstract).

Copy
Share
Article Metrics
  • Abstract:
  • PDF:
  • HTML:
  • Cited by:
History
  • Received:June 10,2019
  • Revised:September 05,2019
  • Adopted:
  • Online: November 06,2019
  • Published: