JOHNSON, CARI L., Stanford University, Dept. of Geological
and
Environmental Sciences, Stanford, CA
ABSTRACT: Age, Style, and Regional Significance of Late Mesozoic Extension, Yinshan Mountains, China: Implications for Petroleum Systems in Northern Ordos Basin
The proposed research will determine whether a sequence of sedimentary and metamorphic rocks exposed in the Yinshan mountains, China, represent an Early Cretaceous extensional regime. In addition to interpretation of these rocks at outcrop and local scales, this project will further elucidate the complex history of intracontinental deformation and associated sedimentary response in the China-Mongolia border region during the late Mesozoic. Finally, this research will address the prospectivity of a late Mesozoic hydrocarbon-bearing rift system in the subsurface of northern Ordos basin.
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Reconnaissance fieldwork
indicates that a sequence of siliciclastic sedimentary rocks
was deposited in a half graben along the northern margin of Ordos basin during the late
Mesozoic. In addition, preliminary study of a series of mylonites and gneisses exposed
nearby suggests that these rocks may represent a metamorphic core complex, possibly formed
during Early Cretaceous extension. The specific questions that will be answered by this
research are: 1) Do the sedimentary and metamorphic rocks record an extensional event (or
multiple events)? If so, when did this event occur and what was the overall extensional
stress orientation? 2) What is the significance of these rocks considering the geologic
history of the Yinshan area in which multiple episodes of thrusting, extension, and
strike-slip faulting have been documented throughout the Jura-Cretaceous? 3) How do these
outcrops relate to the documented Jura-Cretaceous petroliferous rift systems in central
Asia, and what is the potential for an analogous rift system in the Ordos subbasin?
AAPG Search and Discovery Article #90909©2000 AAPG Foundation Grants-in-Aid