Affiliation:
1. Key Laboratory of Orogenic Belts and Crustal Evolution Ministry of Education School of Earth and Space Sciences Peking University Beijing China
2. Department of Earth, Ocean and Atmospheric Sciences University of British Columbia Vancouver BC Canada
Abstract
AbstractSource‐to‐sink systems respond to and therefore potentially record topographic and tectonic changes. North of the Tian Shan Belt, the Sikeshu subbasin of the SW Junggar Basin transitioned from active extension in the Triassic to post‐extensional subsidence in the Jurassic‐Cretaceous. Sediment in the Sikeshu subbasin has been shown to be derived from the Tianshan. However, the details of the source‐to‐sink system remain unclear and discrepancies exist between proxy records. The heavy minerals in the Middle Triassic in the Sikeshu subbasin are dominated by garnets. To investigate the garnet sources and decipher the Mesozoic source‐to‐sink evolution, we conducted petrological and sedimentary analysis and detrital garnet and tourmaline geochemistry. We found that the geochemistry of garnets in the Middle Triassic sandstone is most consistent with that of the skarns in the Yili Block (YB) in Tianshan, while the geochemistry of 55%–84% of garnets in other Mesozoic sandstones is consistent with that of garnets in amphibolites in the YB. The geochemistry of the tourmalines since the Upper Triassic is consistent with that of the meta‐sedimentary rocks in the YB and Central Tianshan Block. The dominance of garnets sourced from skarns in the Middle Triassic probably indicates a near‐source point provenance and the broader range of garnet compositions from the Upper Triassic–Lower Cretaceous suggests multiple sources. We infer that the point source changed to multiple sources, which is consistent with the zircon spectra changing from unimodal to multimodal. This change reflects the expansion of the drainage that accompanies a change from active rifting to a post‐rift stage.
Funder
National Natural Science Foundation of China
Publisher
American Geophysical Union (AGU)