Volcanism Pacing Slumping Gravity Flow Deposits during the Late Carboniferous in the Southern Margin of the Junggar Basin, China

Author:

LI Shixin12,ZHANG Tingshan12,ZHANG Xi12,LIANG Zeliang3,JI Dongsheng3,POPA Mihai Emilian14,YONG Jinjie1,LUO Jinyu12,ZENG Jianli1,ZHU Haihua12

Affiliation:

1. School of Geoscience and Technology Southwest Petroleum University Chengdu 610500 China

2. Natural Gas Geology Key Laboratory of Sichuan Province Southwest Petroleum University Chengdu 610500 China

3. PetroChina Xinjiang Oilfield Company, Karamay Xinjiang 834000 China

4. Faculty of Geology and Geophysics University of Bucharest Bucharest 010041 Romania

Abstract

AbstractDeep‐water gravity depositional processes and evolution in arc systems have become topics of intense research focus in recent years. This study discusses the co‐evolution of volcanism and deep‐water gravity flow deposits at the southern margin of the Junggar Basin, based on petrology, geochronology and geochemical analyses. The results show that a massive collapse of unstable sediments from the slope was triggered by volcanism, resulting in the formation of slumping gravity flows. The occurrence of volcanic beds in the slump deposits confirm that synchronous volcanism likely affected sediment instability, triggering gravity flows. The Th/Yb, Ta/Yb and Th/Ta elemental ratios, U‐Pb ages of detrital zircons and paleocurrent directions indicate that the North Tianshan (NTS) island arc represents the provenance of the Qianxia Formation. Moreover, statistical data on the pyroclastic components in the gravity flow deposits reveal an intensity index of volcanism, indicating that volcanism is strongly related to gravity flow deposits, especially in terms of the type and distribution of the deposits. A model for volcanically‐triggered deep‐water gravity flow deposits is established, in order to provide a more in‐depth understanding of the co‐evolution of volcanism and gravity flow deposits within the depositional setting of the late Paleozoic NTS oceanic subduction margin in the Junggar Basin.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Geology

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