4.6 Article

The Yanshan orogeny and late Mesozoic multi-plate convergence in East AsiaCommemorating 90th years of the Yanshan Orogeny

Journal

SCIENCE CHINA-EARTH SCIENCES
Volume 61, Issue 12, Pages 1888-1909

Publisher

SCIENCE PRESS
DOI: 10.1007/s11430-017-9297-y

Keywords

Yanshan orogeny; Mid-Late Jurassic; East Asia plate convergence; Intracontinental orogeny; Amasia supercontinent

Funding

  1. National Key R & D Program of China [2017YFC0601402]
  2. Basic Science Foundation of Chinese Academy of Geological Sciences [JYYWF20182101]
  3. National Natural Science Foundation of China [41822205]
  4. SinoProbe [08-01]

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The Yanshan movement/orogeny has been proposed for 90 years, which is of special significance in the history of geological research in China. This study conducted a review by synthesizing major achievements regarding episodic deformation features, sedimentary and magmatic records of the Yanshan orogeny in China, and clarified the episodic tectono-magmatism and its geodynamic origins. The tectonic implications of the Yanshan orogeny are discussed in the context of global plate tectonics and supercontinent reconstruction. Lines of evidence from structural, sedimentary and magmatic data suggest that the Yanshan orogeny represents a regional-scale tectonic event that affected the entire China continent in late Mesozoic period. Numerous age and structural constraints consistently indicate that the Yanshan orogeny was initiated in the Jurassic (at approximate to 170 +/- 5 Ma). and was characterized by alternating stages of crustal shortening at approximate to 170-136 Ma, crustal extension at approximate to 135-90 Ma, and weak shortening at approximate to 80 Ma. The 170-136 Ma crustal shortening was reflected in the generation of two regional stratigraphic unconformities (the Tiaojishan and Zhangjiakou unconformities), which were initially named the A and B episodes of the Yanshan Orogeny by Mr. Wong Wenhao in 1928. Geodynamically, the Yanshan orogeny in East Asia was associated with nearly coeval oceanic subduction and continental convergence in the Paleo-Pacific, Neo-Tethys, and Mongol-Okhotsk tectonic domains. As a consequence, three giant accretionary-collisional tectonic systems were formed along the continental margins of East Asia, i.e., the Mongol-Okhotsk, Bangonghu-Nujiang, and SE China subduction- and collision-related accretionary systems. The Yanshan orogeny induced widespread crustal-scale folding and thrusting, tectonic reactivation of long-lived zones of crustal weakness, and extensive magmatism and mineralization in intraplate regions. Based on the time principle of supercontinent assembly and break-up, we propose that the mid-Late Jurassic multi-plate convergence in East Asia might represent the initiation of the assembly of the Amasia supercontinent, and the Yanshan orogeny might be the first stirrings that is a prerequisite for the birth of the Amasia supercontinent.

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