Back to Search
Start Over
Late Oligocene-early Miocene evolution of the Lunpola Basin, central Tibetan Plateau, evidences from successive lacustrine records
- Source :
- Gondwana Research. 48:224-236
- Publication Year :
- 2017
- Publisher :
- Elsevier BV, 2017.
-
Abstract
- Widespread Cenozoic sediments in and around the Tibetan Plateau (TP) are thought to have played an important role in explaining the process of the India-Asia collision as well as its interactions with global and regional paleoclimate. However, high-resolution temporal frameworks of sedimentary sequences and controls on geological and climatic events are still absent. To study the abovementioned issues, we investigate the Oligocene-Miocene lacustrine sequences (the Dingqinghu Formation) of the Lunpola Basin, central TP. In this work, cyclostratigraphic analyses are conducted with gamma ray log and pollen data to establish a high resolution temporal framework ranging from ca. 25.4 to 18.0 Ma for the sections. Along these sections, sediment accumulation rates are calculated with orbital signals to monitor clastic input of the lake basin; elemental, palynological, and isotopic data are summarized to depict the paleoclimate and paleoelevation evolution of this drainage system. Integrating all these clues together, we sort out a chronological list of events including lake basin, tectonics, and paleoclimate: regional uplift took place at 23.7 Ma; simultaneously, a distinct lake-basin transition characterized by accelerated sediment accumulation rate is recognized; about 0.2 Ma later at 23.5 Ma, catchment scale drought occurred and maintained to the end of the sections. Our results demonstrate that paleoclimate did not impose decisive influence on the late Oligocene-early Miocene evolution of the lake basin; instead, regional uplift and its associated accelerated exhumation of the source area resulted in the lake-basin transition and paleoclimatic drought. After reviewing the Oligocene-Miocene sedimentary records distributed in and around the TP, we argue that the 23.7 Ma geological event of the Lunpola Basin is probably not a single case but a regional effect of a dramatic tectonic transition of the plateau.
- Subjects :
- Palynology
010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciences
Geology
Cyclostratigraphy
Structural basin
010502 geochemistry & geophysics
01 natural sciences
Paleontology
Clastic rock
Drainage system (geomorphology)
Paleoclimatology
Sedimentary rock
Cenozoic
0105 earth and related environmental sciences
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 1342937X
- Volume :
- 48
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Gondwana Research
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi...........97795300b4535867f48b8fcecc4ff209