Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8912539 | Precambrian Research | 2018 | 42 Pages |
Abstract
Sedimentary exchanges across continents during the collisional assembly and lifespan of supercontinents provide a powerful way of testing the assembling process and configuration of supercontinents. The Ord Basin in north-western Australia contains mid-Cambrian shallow marine and deltaic sedimentary successions that post-date the ca. 650-520â¯Ma Paterson-Petermann Orogeny (PPO) but are synchronous with the ca. 530-470â¯Ma Kurgiakh Orogeny in north India. We report new U-Pb ages and Hf isotopes of detrital zircons from the mid-Cambrian Ord Basin that suggest Indian-derived sedimentary input to Australian Cambrian basins. Compilations of published Ediacaran-Ordovician samples from the Centralian Superbasin indicate that during the ca. 650-520â¯Ma PPO, the 1200-1100â¯Ma Musgrave province in central Australia was exhumed and fed sediments to the syn-PPO Centralian Superbasin. Soon after the PPO termination, the Musgrave province likely remained a topographic high and continued to supply detritus to the Amadeus and Officer basins that were fragmented from the Centralian Superbasin, supplemented by the â¼630â¯Ma granites of the Paterson orogen. Conversely, we conclude that the mid-Cambrian Ord Basin did not record similar sedimentary provenance from the Musgrave province. Rather, Indian-derived detritus travelled along the northeastern Gondwanan continental margin via longshore currents, and in turn incorporated Paterson granitic detritus, during the assembly of Gondwana (including the Kurgiakh Orogeny in north India). A broad provenance comparison between potential eastern Gondwanan source regions and relevant Asian neighbours suggests that South China and South Qiangtang are affiliated with northern India, but Lhasa appears to have had a mixed affiliation between India and Australia.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Earth and Planetary Sciences
Geochemistry and Petrology
Authors
Weihua Yao, Zheng-Xiang Li, Christopher J. Spencer, Erin L. Martin,