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Permian rifting processes in the NW Junggar Basin, China: Implications for the post-accretionary successor basins

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Abstract The Junggar Basin, bounded by the West Junggar along late Carboniferous strike-slip faults in the west, is a post- orogenic successor basin within the Neoproterozoic to Paleozoic Central Asian… Click to show full abstract

Abstract The Junggar Basin, bounded by the West Junggar along late Carboniferous strike-slip faults in the west, is a post- orogenic successor basin within the Neoproterozoic to Paleozoic Central Asian Orogenic Belt (CAOB). The Junggar Basin is a key region for understanding the Permian rifting processes since it is located in an extensional step-over zone between the Irtysh and North Tianshan strike-slip fault zones that were most active in the Permian. Based on new seismic reflection profiles, detrital petrology and zircon U-Pb ages, together with regional geological data and a refraction seismic profile, this study investigates the tectonic evolution and the geodynamic mechanics of the basin. The early Permian phase of syn-rift mechanical subsidence in the western Junggar Basin formed half grabens. Volcanic detritus is abundant, and detrital zircon U-Pb ages show sediment supply was entirely local. During the middle Permian post-rift phase with thermal subsidence, sediment supply exceeded subsidence, and there are increasingly distant sources of sediment. The Permian regional extensional stress field between major post- accretionary strike-slip fault zones triggered the reactivation of the pre-existing late Carboniferous strike-slip faults in West Junggar and produced thinning of the crust beneath the Junggar Basin, with a β crustal stretching factor of 1.74. Seismic refraction data reveals asthenospheric upwelling resulted in underplated mafic lower crust (6–10 km). The location of initial rift axis in the Junggar Basin was controlled by the juxtaposition of thin and weak crust beneath the basin and relatively strengthened thick crust in the West Junggar attributed to the cooling of A-type granites, resulting from localized strain. Similar location of post-orogenic rifting in southwestern CAOB, in areas of high heat flow following collision, suggests that Junggar Basin is an example of a more general process.

Keywords: junggar basin; junggar; rifting processes; permian rifting; strike slip

Journal Title: Gondwana Research
Year Published: 2021

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