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      Mid-Cretaceous thick carbonate accumulation in Northern Lhasa (Tibet): eustatic vs. tectonic control?

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          Abstract

          Widespread accumulation of thick carbonates is not typical of orogenic settings. During the mid-Cretaceous, near the Bangong suture in the northern Lhasa terrane, the shallow-marine carbonates of the Langshan Formation, reaching a thickness up to ~1 km, accumulated in an epicontinental seaway over a modern area of 132 × 103 km2, about half of the Arabian/Persian Gulf. The origin of basin-wide carbonate deposits located close to a newly formed orogenic belt is not well understood, partly because of the scarcity of paleogeographic studies on the evolution of the northern Lhasa. Based on a detailed sedimentological and stratigraphic investigation, three stages in the mid-Cretaceous paleogeographic evolution of northern Lhasa were defined: (1) remnant clastic sea with deposition of Duoni/Duba formations (Early to early Late Aptian, ca. 125–116 Ma); (2) expanding carbonate seaway of Langshan Formation (latest Aptian–earliest Cenomanian, ca. 116–99 Ma); and (3) closure of the carbonate seaway represented by the Daxiong/Jingzhushan formations (Early Cenomanian to Turonian, ca. 99–92 Ma). Combined with data on tectonic subsidence and eustatic curves, we emphasized the largely eustatic control on the paleogeographic evolution of the northern Lhasa during the latest Aptian–earliest Cenomanian when the Langshan carbonates accumulated, modulated by long-term slow tectonic subsidence and high carbonate productivity.

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          K. Miller (2005)
          We review Phanerozoic sea-level changes [543 million years ago (Ma) to the present] on various time scales and present a new sea-level record for the past 100 million years (My). Long-term sea level peaked at 100 +/- 50 meters during the Cretaceous, implying that ocean-crust production rates were much lower than previously inferred. Sea level mirrors oxygen isotope variations, reflecting ice-volume change on the 10(4)- to 10(6)-year scale, but a link between oxygen isotope and sea level on the 10(7)-year scale must be due to temperature changes that we attribute to tectonically controlled carbon dioxide variations. Sea-level change has influenced phytoplankton evolution, ocean chemistry, and the loci of carbonate, organic carbon, and siliciclastic sediment burial. Over the past 100 My, sea-level changes reflect global climate evolution from a time of ephemeral Antarctic ice sheets (100 to 33 Ma), through a time of large ice sheets primarily in Antarctica (33 to 2.5 Ma), to a world with large Antarctic and large, variable Northern Hemisphere ice sheets (2.5 Ma to the present).
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            Continental stretching: An explanation of the Post-Mid-Cretaceous subsidence of the central North Sea Basin

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              Did the Indo-Asian collision alone create the Tibetan plateau?

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                GSA Bulletin
                Geological Society of America
                0016-7606
                1943-2674
                May 11 2021
                January 01 2022
                May 11 2021
                January 01 2022
                : 134
                : 1-2
                : 389-404
                Affiliations
                [1 ]State Key Laboratory of Mineral Deposits Research, School of Earth Sciences and Engineering, Nanjing University, Nanjing 210023, China
                [2 ]Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences, Università di Milano-Bicocca, Milano 20126, Italy
                [3 ]Department of Earth Sciences, University College London, Gower Street, London, WC1E 6BT, UK
                [4 ]College of Oceanography, Hohai University, Nanjing 210098, China
                [5 ]School of Tourism, Henan Normal University, Xinxiang 453007, China
                Article
                10.1130/B35930.1
                a3a7576d-f9cb-4215-aaa0-f227b92ade4a
                © 2022
                History

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