Formation of the First Bend in the late Eocene gave birth to the modern Yangtze River, China

Author:

Zheng Hongbo12,Clift Peter D.13,He Mengying4,Bian Zixuan1,Liu Gaozheng1,Liu Xiaochun1,Xia Lei1,Yang Qing1,Jourdan Fred5

Affiliation:

1. Yunnan Key Laboratory of Earth System Science, Yunnan University, Kunming 650500, China

2. School of Earth and Environmental Sciences, The University of Queensland, Brisbane, Queensland 4072, Australia

3. Department of Geology and Geophysics, Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, Louisiana 70803, USA

4. School of Geography Science, Nanjing Normal University, Nanjing 210023, China

5. Western Australian Argon Isotope Facility, Department of Applied Geology and JdL Centre, Curtin University, Perth, Western Australia 6845, Australia

Abstract

Abstract The First Bend on the Yangtze River (China), the point where the river ceases flowing toward the south and heads toward the northeast, has been one of the most strongly debated geomorphic features in Asia because it holds the key to understanding the history of the Yangtze River and is linked to the tectonically driven surface uplift of the southeastern Tibetan Plateau. Mid- to upper Eocene sedimentary rocks preserved in the Jianchuan Basin located immediately southwest of the First Bend demonstrate that a large river system, presumably the paleo–Jinshajiang River (the upper Yangtze), used to flow south through that region. Provenance analysis of sediments over the wider region, based mostly on U-Pb dating of detrital zircon grains, confirms that the once south-flowing paleo–Yangtze River originated in the Tibetan Plateau and flowed into the South China Sea. Inversion of the Jianchuan Basin, starting in or after the latest Eocene and associated with wider plateau surface uplift at that time, caused the river to be diverted toward the northeast where it was confined along tectonic lineaments associated with strike-slip faulting, giving birth to the First Bend, a major step in the formation of the modern Yangtze River.

Publisher

Geological Society of America

Subject

Geology

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