What drove late Mesozoic extension of the northern China Mongolia tract

The northern China–Mongolia tract exhibited a tectonic transition from contractional to extensional deformation in late Mesozoic time. Late Middle to early Late Jurassic crustal shortening is widely thought to have resulted from collision of an amalgamated North China–Mongolia block and the Siberian plate, but widespread late Late Jurassic–Early Cretaceous extension has not been satisfactorily explained by existing models. Some prominent features of the extensional tectonics of the northern China–Mongolia tract are: (1) Late Jurassic voluminous volcanism prior to Early Cretaceous large-magnitude rapid extension; (2) overlapping in time of contractional deformation in the Yinshan–Yanshan belt with development of extensionrelated basins in the interior of the northern China–Mongolia tract; and (3) widespread occurrence of alkali granitic plutonism, extensional basins and metamorphic core complexes in the Early Cretaceous. A new explanation is advanced in this study for this sequence of events. The collision of amalgamated North China–Mongolia with Siberia led to crustal overthickening of the northern China–Mongolia tract and formation of a high-standing plateau. Subsequent breakoff at depth of the north-dipping Mongol–Okhotsk oceanic slab is suggested as the main trigger for late Mesozoic lithospheric extension of that tract. Slab breakoff resulted in mantle lithospheric stretching of the adjacent northern China–Mongolia tract with subsequent ascent of hot asthenosphere and magmatic underplating at the base of the crust. Collectively, these phenomena triggered gravitational collapse of the previously thickened crust, leading to late Late Jurassic–Early Cretaceous crustal extension, and importantly, coeval contraction along the southern margin of the plateau in the Yinshan–Yanshan belt. The proposed model provides a framework for interpreting the spatial and temporal relationships of distinct processes and reconciling some seemingly contradictory phenomena, such as the synchronous extension of northerly terranes during major contraction in the neighboring Yanshan–Yinshan belt. D 2003 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

[1]  S. Otoh Mesozoic inversive wrench tectonics in far east Asia : examples from Korea and Japan , 1996 .

[2]  B. Darby,et al.  Major thrust sheet in the Daqing Shan Mountains Inner Mongolia, China , 1998 .

[3]  X. M. Zhou,et al.  Origin of Late Mesozoic igneous rocks in Southeastern China: implications for lithosphere subduction and underplating of mafic magmas , 2000 .

[4]  W. Hongzhen,et al.  An outline of the tectonic evolution of China , 1995 .

[5]  S. Chough,et al.  Tectonic and sedimentary evolution of the Korean peninsula: a review and new view , 1998 .

[6]  J. Dewey Extensional collapse of orogens , 1988 .

[7]  G. Gehrels,et al.  The enigmatic Yinshan fold-and-thrust belt of northern China: New views on its intraplate contractional styles , 1998 .

[8]  W. Harbert,et al.  Evolution of the Mongol-Okhotsk Ocean as constrained by new palaeomagnetic data from the Mongol-Okhotsk suture zone, Siberia , 2002 .

[9]  C. Morley Tectonic Settings of Continental Extensional Provinces and Their Impact on Ssedimentation and Hydrocarbon Prospectivity , 2002 .

[10]  L. Zonenshain,et al.  Geology of the USSR : a plate-tectonic synthesis , 1990 .

[11]  Leigh H. Royden,et al.  Rifting process and thermal evolution of the continental margin of Eastern Canada determined from subsidence curves , 1980 .

[12]  X. Jiawei,et al.  Tectonic Models of the Tan-Lu Fault Zone, Eastern China , 1994 .

[13]  Y. Geng Thin-skinned Thrust Nappe Structures in Western Liaoning in the Eastern Sector of the Yanshan Orogenic Belt , 2001 .

[14]  M. Kono,et al.  Mesozoic collision—extrusion tectonics in eastern Asia , 1990 .

[15]  K. Tang Tectonic development of Paleozoic foldbelts at the north margin of the Sino‐Korean Craton , 1990 .

[16]  B. Darby,et al.  Early Jurassic extensional basin formation in the Daqing Shan segment of the Yinshan belt, northern North China Block, Inner Mongolia , 2001 .

[17]  D. Macdonald,et al.  Transtensional deformation in the evolution of the Bohai Basin, northern China , 1998, Geological Society, London, Special Publications.

[18]  S. Graham,et al.  Sedimentary record and tectonic implications of Mesozoic rifting in southeast Mongolia , 2001 .

[19]  郑亚东 AN ENORMOUS THRUST NAPPE AND EXTENSIONAL METAMORPHIC CORE COMPLEX NEWLY DISCOVERED IN SINO-MONGOLIAN BOUNDARY AREA , 1991 .

[20]  P. Khosbayar,et al.  The South Siberia-Central Mongolia transect , 1993 .

[21]  W. R. Buck,et al.  Modes of continental lithospheric extension , 1991 .

[22]  B. Darby,et al.  Structural evolution of the southwestern Daqing Shan, Yinshan belt, Inner Mongolia, China , 2001 .

[23]  E. Sklyarov,et al.  The East Siberia Transect , 1995 .

[24]  G. Gehrels,et al.  Mesozoic tectonic evolution of the Yanshan fold and thrust belt, with emphasis on Hebei and Liaoning provinces, northern China , 2001 .

[25]  R. Enkin,et al.  Paleomagnetic constraints on the geodynamic history of the major blocks of China from the Permian to the present , 1992 .

[26]  D. Cunningham,et al.  Structural and lithological characteristics of the Bayankhongor Ophiolite Zone, Central Mongolia , 2001, Journal of the Geological Society.

[27]  F. Blanckenburg,et al.  Slab breakoff: A model of lithosphere detachment and its test in the magmatism and deformation of collisional orogens , 1995 .

[28]  S. Maruyama,et al.  Orogeny and relative plate motions : example of the Japanese Islands , 1986 .

[29]  G. Lister,et al.  Plutonism and the origin of metamorphic core complexes , 1993 .

[30]  T. Harrison,et al.  The tectonic evolution of Asia , 1996 .

[31]  S. Graham,et al.  Noyon Uul syncline, southern Mongolia: Lower Mesozoic sedimentary record of the tectonic amalgamation of central Asia , 1996 .

[32]  Bin Chen,et al.  Massive granitoid generation in Central Asia: Nd isotope evidence and implication for continental growth in the Phanerozoic , 2000 .

[33]  Yangyuan Wang,et al.  Great Jurassic thrust sheets in Beishan (North Mountains)—Gobi areas of China and southern Mongolia , 1996 .

[34]  Y. Zorin Geodynamics of the western part of the Mongolia–Okhotsk collisional belt, Trans-Baikal region (Russia) and Mongolia , 1999 .

[35]  S. Graham,et al.  Occurrence, age, and implications of the Yagan–Onch Hayrhan metamorphic core complex, southern Mongolia , 1999 .

[36]  Yan Chen,et al.  Tectonic evolution of the Tancheng‐Lujiang (Tan‐Lu) fault via Middle Triassic to Early Cenozoic paleomagnetic data , 1999 .

[37]  D. McKenzie,et al.  Some remarks on the development of sedimentary basins , 1978 .

[38]  J. Traynor,et al.  Tectonic and stratigraphic evolution of the Mongolian People's Republic and its influence on hydrocarbon geology and potential , 1995 .

[39]  A. Chen Geometric and kinematic evolution of basement-cored structures: intraplate orogenesis within the Yanshan Orogen, northern China , 1998 .

[40]  H. Wenk,et al.  Exhumation of the ultrahigh‐pressure continental crust in east central China: Cretaceous and Cenozoic unroofing and the Tan‐Lu fault , 2000 .

[41]  R. Fursenko,et al.  Tectonics, Magmatism and Metallogeny of Mongolia , 2004 .

[42]  Allan Cox,et al.  Relative Motions Between Oceanic and Continental Plates in the Pacific Basin , 1986 .

[43]  T. Spell,et al.  Geometric and temporal evolution of an extensional detachment fault, Hohhot metamorphic core complex, Inner Mongolia, China , 2002 .

[44]  D. Delvaux,et al.  Early Cretaceous denudation related to convergent tectonics in the Baikal region, SE Siberia , 1996, Journal of the Geological Society.

[45]  Xueya Liu,et al.  Paleoplate tectonics between Cathaysia and Angaraland in inner Mongolia of China , 1986 .

[46]  M. P. Watson,et al.  Plate tectonic history, basin development and petroleum source rock deposition onshore China , 1987 .

[47]  H. Lapierre,et al.  Mesozoic felsic arc magmatism and continental olivine tholeiites in Zhejiang Province and their relationship with the tectonic activity in southeastern China , 1997 .

[48]  P. Pruner Palaeomagnetism and palaeogeography of Mongolia from the Carboniferous to the Cretaceous—final report , 1992 .

[49]  M. Hendrix,et al.  Paleozoic and Mesozoic Tectonic Evolution of Central and Eastern Asia: From Continental Assembly to Intracontinental Deformation , 2001 .

[50]  G. Badarch,et al.  Paleozoic Sedimentary Basins and Volcanic-Arc Systems of Southern Mongolia: New Stratigraphic and Sedimentologic Constraints , 1997 .

[51]  W. Spakman,et al.  Mesozoic subducted slabs under Siberia , 1999, Nature.

[52]  S. J. Friedmann,et al.  Rift basins and supradetachment basins: intracontinental extensional end-members , 1995 .

[53]  G. Gehrels,et al.  Geochronological evidence for existence of South Mongolian microcontinent—A zircon U-Pb age of grantoid gneisses from the Yagan-Onch Hayrhan metamorphic core complex , 2001 .

[54]  A. Şengör,et al.  Relative timing of rifting and volcanism on earth and its tectonic implications , 1978 .