North-dipping relict subduction of the Paleo-Asian Ocean at the southeastern margin of the Mongolian Terrane: Study of two parallel deep seismic profiles
W. Fu, H. Hou, R. Gao, Haiyan Wang, Lei Guo, Jianbo Zhou, Jin Yang, R. Guo, Zongdong Pan
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
The final closure of the Paleo-Asian Ocean (PAO) and its tectonic characteristics have been debated for several decades owing to a lack of high-resolution information on the lithosphere structure. Scholars have been attempting to explain deep tectonic evolutionary processes while studying continental growth at the southern margin of the Mongolian Terrane. In a bid to provide a new interpretation of the deep structure with a higher resolution, we study two reprocessed deep seismic reflection profiles. We studied the northern part (210 km long) of the 630-km-long deep seismic reflection profile extending across the North China Craton (NCC) margin to the northern Sino-Mongolia border in the west; and a parallel profile (80 km long) in the east near the Sino-Mongolia border. Both profiles are characterized by consistently north-dipping layered reflections projecting from the lower crust to the upper mantle, with an estimated thickness of 3.6 to 6 km between adjacent reflections beneath the Uliastai and Hegenshan belts. Arched reflections are observed in the middle and lower crust; these may have been caused by later magmatic activities. In addition, the Moho reflection is observed to be fairly continuous and flat in most parts of these two profiles. The layered lower crust reflections and mantle reflections serve as important evidence that northward subduction occurred during the closure of the Paleo-Asian Ocean at the southeastern margin of the Mongolian Terrane. We propose a detailed model of the evolutionary processes from the early Paleozoic to early Mesozoic. The proposed model explains how these deep reflections were formed.
期刊介绍:
The American Journal of Science (AJS), founded in 1818 by Benjamin Silliman, is the oldest scientific journal in the United States that has been published continuously. The Journal is devoted to geology and related sciences and publishes articles from around the world presenting results of major research from all earth sciences. Readers are primarily earth scientists in academia and government institutions.