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Middle Triassic lake deepening in the Ordos Basin of North China linked with global sea-level rise

Authors :
Marcello Caggiati
James G. Ogg
Marco Franceschi
Xin Jin
Corey J. Wall
Guanglin Liu
Mark D. Schmitz
Gang Lu
Piero Gianolla
Nereo Preto
Zhiqiang Shi
Viktória Baranyi
Jin, Xin
Baranyi, Viktória
Caggiati, Marcello
Franceschi, Marco
Wall, Corey J.
Liu, Guanglin
Schmitz, Mark D.
Gianolla, Piero
Ogg, James G.
Lu, Gang
Shi, Zhiqiang
Preto, Nereo
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

The Yanchang Formation was deposited during the Middle Triassic in a vast lacustrine basin in the modern Ordos Basin and is a main target for hydrocarbon exploration in Central China. It is divided, based on sedimentary cycles and lithology, into the Chang 10 (the oldest) to Chang 1 (the youngest) members. During the deposition of the Chang 7 Member, the Ordos lake system reached its maximum depth and large volumes of organic-rich sediments were deposited. The evolution of the Ordos Basin sedimentary system during this phase is, however, not completely understood, and uncertainty still exists as for the chronostratigraphy of Chang 7 Member. We acquired palynological markers and palynofacies and a high-resolution δ13Corg record through the entire Chang 7 Member, and a ID-TIMS 206Pb/238U date of 240.95 ± 0.033 Ma from a volcanic ash bed in the middle of this Member. These imply that the maximum deepening phase of the lacustrine system was during the earliest Ladinian. Evidence of marine influence in the Ordos Basin at that time and comparison to the sea-level oscillations observed in Western Tethys suggest that a global eustatic rise and highstand may have played a role in determining lake-level variations.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....af774c299e185d113cd8b118761afe05