A Late Archean foreland fold and thrust belt in the North China Craton: Implications for early collisional tectonics |
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Authors: | Jianghai Li Timothy Kusky |
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Institution: | aSchool of Earth and Space Sciences, Peking University, Beijing 100871, China;bDepartment of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences, Saint Louis University, St. Louis, 63130, USA |
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Abstract: | The Archean North China craton is divided into the Western and Eastern blocks along the Central Orogenic belt. A 1600 km long Archean foreland basin and thrust belt fringes the eastern side of the Central Orogenic belt. Rocks in the orogen form tectonically-stacked east-vergent fold and thrust sheets including foreland basin sediments, 2.50 Ga ophiolitic mélange, and an island arc complex. Foreland basin sediments overlie a passive margin sequence, and include a 2.50 Ga deep-water turbidite sequence that grades upward and westward into shallow-water molasse, now disposed in structurally imbricated east-verging thrusts and asymmetric folds that gradually migrated craton-ward with deformation, uplift, and erosion of the orogen. There is a strong linked relationship of the formation of the foreland basin to collision of the east and west blocks of the North China craton along the Central Orogenic belt at 2.50 Ga. The Qinglong foreland basin and Central Orogenic belt of the North China craton represents one of the best-preserved Archean orogen-to-craton transitions in the world. Its classic internal to external zonation, and flexural response to loading, demonstrate that convergent tectonics in the Archean were broadly similar to Phanerozoic convergent margin processes. |
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Keywords: | Fold and thrust belt Foreland basin Molasse Flysch China Archean |
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