Lower Moscovian Limestones of the Bogdashan Range (NW China) as an Indicator of Cessation of Arc Magmatism in the Junggar Region


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Abstract

The field revision of the Carboniferous and Lower Permian stratigraphy of the northern Bogdashan (South Junggar, Northwest China) shows that the Lower to Middle Carboniferous island arc volcanic rocks, widely developed in this region, are overlapped everywhere by carbonate and terrigenous-carbonate sediments, containing occasional lava flows and overlain up the section by thick terrigenous series practically devoid of volcanic rocks. The deposition of limestone occurred at the stage of dying off of a volcanic arc, and the question of their age is of fundamental importance for dating this event. Carbonates are represented by facies of lagoons, shoals, and bioherms that formed on the leveled surface of the arc and on the slopes of the last active volcanoes. Bioherms are Waulsortian mounds and are mainly composed of algal limestones and carbonate mud. There are no framestones composed of corals and sponges (chaetetids) typical of the tropical zone. The facies of shallow crinoid-fusulinid limestones typical of the adjacent territories of the Southern Tien Shan and Tarim are poorly represented. Paleogeographically, the position of bioherms corresponds to the northern boundary of the realm of Pennsylvanian reefs. On the basis of foraminifers, brachiopods, and corals, the age of carbonates is early Moscovian (ca. 315–310 Ma). Cessation of island-arc volcanism, followed by the accumulation of limestone in Bogdashan, occurred sub-synchronously with formation of the West Junggar (Bayingou) suture and may reflect docking of the Bogdashan arc to the Yili active margin of the Kazakhstan continent. Further subsidence of Bogdashan and adjacent regions of the Junggar and Turfan basins, which was somewhat slower at the end of the Carboniferous and more intense in the Early and Middle Permian, may reflect the development of the foreland basin that formed along the northern flank of the Tien Shan orogen. Marine facies were locally preserved in this basin until the Artinskian (ca. 285 Ma), and later the Junggar and Turfan basins lost connection to the ocean and developed in continental environments.

About the authors

D. V. Alexeiev

Geological Institute, Russian Academy of Sciences

Author for correspondence.
Email: dvalexeiev@mail.ru
Russian Federation, Pyzhevskii per. 7, Moscow, 119017

Yu. S. Biske

Institute of Earth Sciences, St. Petersburg State University

Email: dvalexeiev@mail.ru
Russian Federation, Universitetskaya nab. 7–9, St. Petersburg, 199034

A. V. Djenchuraeva

Institute of Geology, National Academy of Sciences of the Kyrgyz Republic

Email: dvalexeiev@mail.ru
Kyrgyzstan, Bishkek

B. Wang

State Key Laboratory for Mineral Deposits Research, School of Earth Sciences and Engineering,
Nanjing University

Email: dvalexeiev@mail.ru
China, 22 Hankou Road, Nanjing, 210093

O. L. Kossovaya

Karpinsky Russian Research Geological Institute; Kazan Federal University

Email: dvalexeiev@mail.ru
Russian Federation, Srednii pr. 74, St. Petersburg, 199106; 18 Kremlyovskaya ul., Kazan, Republic of Tatarstan, 420008

L. L. Zhong

State Key Laboratory for Mineral Deposits Research, School of Earth Sciences and Engineering,
Nanjing University

Email: dvalexeiev@mail.ru
China, 22 Hankou Road, Nanjing, 210093

Yu. V. Savitskiy

Institute of Earth Sciences, St. Petersburg State University

Email: dvalexeiev@mail.ru
Russian Federation, Universitetskaya nab. 7–9, St. Petersburg, 199034

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