Abstract: Basin Analysis Constrains the Strike-slip History
of the Altyn Tagh-Alxa-East Mongolia Fault
System
YUE, YONGJUN, Stanford University, Department of Geological and Environmental Sciences, Stanford, CA
I established a correlation between the Beishan and the Inner
Mongolia orogens north of the Qilian Shan, and suggested that the Altyn
Tagh fault
, which defines the northern margin of the Tibetan plateau, propagated
to the NEE to join the presently inactive, NEE-NE trending Alxa-East Mongolia
fault
during its early stage of evolution (Oligocene to -13 Ma). This hypothesis
predicts that the petroliferous Erlian basin south of the Alwa-East Mongolia
fault
may have been contiguous with the poorly explored Beishan-Huahai
basin north of the
fault
before the Oligocene; they have been offset left-laterally
for about 400 km.
I propose to investigate and correlate these two basins as a test for
the above-mentioned hypothesis and to better constrain the strike-slip
history of the Altyn Tagh-Alxa-East Mongolia fault
system. The proposed
project will carry out detailed measurements of the sedimentary formations,
including depositional facies, paleocurrents, palynology, provenance analyses
and biomarker determinations. The integrated facies and laboratory analyses
of these two basins will be used to (1) establish a correlation between
the Erlian and Beishan-Huahai basins, and therefore, further constrain
the offset along the Altyn Tagh-Alxa-East Mongolia
fault
system; (2) provide
constraints on the ages when the Altyn Tagh-Aixa-East Mongolia
fault
system
initiated and when the Alxa-East Mongolia
fault
became inactive; and (3)
quantitatively estimate the long-term slip rate during the early stage
evolution of the
fault
system.
AAPG Search and Discovery Article #90931©1998 AAPG Foundation Grants-in-Aid