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Onset of the late Paleozoic glaciation in the Lhasa terrane, Southern Tibet.

Authors :
An, Xianyin
Xu, Huan
He, Keheng
Xia, Lei
Du, Yan
Ding, Jiaxiang
Yuan, Tingyuan
Liu, Gaozheng
Zheng, Hongbo
Source :
Global & Planetary Change. Jun2023, Vol. 225, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

The Late Paleozoic Ice Age is characterized by diverse stratigraphic records with extensive spatial-temporal distribution in the Gondwana. The Lhasa terrane located in northeastern Gondwana during the late Paleozoic developed successive glacial sedimentary records, but the depositional evidence, as well as age constraint for the onset of glaciation, is unknown. This paper provides the first full description of the basal glacial deposits in the Xainza area of Lhasa terrane, southern Tibet. Conodonts present in the carbonate overlying the glacial bed (1 m) dominantly consist of Declinognathodus intermedius , indicating that the initiation of the Late Paleozoic Ice Age in the Lhasa terrane took place in Bashkirian. Three facies associations were recognized: (i) tidal flat association (subtidal channel, bar, intertidal mixed flat), (ii) subglacial association (megaclasts and melt-out diamictite), and (iii) lonestone-bearing heterolithic association (grounding-line fan and iceberg). These facies associations are vertically arranged into a complete transgressive-retrogressive glacial succession. Ice movement direction reconstructed from the imbricated megaclasts, the concordant folds and the lateral distribution of subglacial deposits and glacial marine deposits is consistently from NNE to SSW. These characteristics suggest that the Bashkirian glaciation in the Lhasa terrane is irrelevant to western Australia, implying that these two blocks were separated during the Late Carboniferous. • The initiation of the LPIA in the Lhasa terrane took place in Bashkirian. • The tidal flat, subglacial and lonestone-bearing heterolithic associations were recognized. • The reconstructed ice movement direction is from NNE to SSW. • The Bashkirian glaciation in the Lhasa terrane is irrelevant to western Australia. • The Lhasa terrane was separated from Australia during the Late Carboniferous. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09218181
Volume :
225
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Global & Planetary Change
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
163766700
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gloplacha.2023.104139