Division of the Ordovician geographic units of China—A synopsis
Zhou Zhiyi Zhen Yongyi Zhou Zhiqiang Yuan Wenwei
1 Nanjing Institute of Geology and Palaeontology,Chinese Academy of Sciences,Nanjing210008,Jiangsu
2 Australian Museum,6 College Street,Sydney,NSW2010,Australia
3 Xian Institute of Geology and Mineral Resources,Xian710054,Shaanxi
Eleven geographic units,corresponding mainly to different allochthonous continental masses(plates and terranes)in the Ordovician in China,are divided on the basis of evidence from regional tectonics,palaeogeography and stratigraphy. The paper is aimed at defining the boundaries of geographic units. Units or regions now in close proximity were distantly separated during the Ordovician. Except for the southern boundary of the North China Region and the northern boundary of the South China Region,which are well demarcated by the coeval intervening Qinling mobile belt,boundaries of most other regions have to be delimited by the conjunctional zones,along which tectonic amalgamations took place after the Ordovician. In detecting boundaries between the Northern Xinjiang/Central TianshanBeishan/ Tarim regions,it is of particular significance to trace the remains of sutural zones that represent the relics of finite ocean basins or deep marine basins,which were developed between the Siberia Plate/Kazakhstan Mid Plate/Tarim Plate during the Ordovician. The final assembly of these Chinese landmasses likely underwent a longsustained process that extended from the Late Carboniferous to the Cenozoic,essentially involving the consumption of the mobile zones and the dispersion,accretion and collision of the relevant plates and terranes.
About author: Zhou Zhiyi,born in 1939,is a research professor. He completed the postgraduate course in Nanjing Institute of Geology and Palaeontology,Chinese Academy of Sciences in 1966. Since then he has been working on palaeontology and stratigraphy in this institute. Email:zyizhou@jlonline.com.
Cite this article:
. Division of the Ordovician geographic units of China—A synopsis[J]. JOURNAL OF PALAEOGEOGRAPHY, 2008, 10(2): 175-182.
. Division of the Ordovician geographic units of China—A synopsis[J]. JOPC, 2008, 10(2): 175-182.