--> ABSTRACT: Structural Development of the Kuche Fold and Trust Belt, Northern Tarim Basin, China, by Wayne B. Gardiner, Sandro Serra, Jia Chengzao, Hu Yun Yang; #91020 (1995).

Datapages, Inc.Print this page

Structural Development of the Kuche Fold and Trust Belt, Northern Tarim Basin, China

Wayne B. Gardiner, Sandro Serra, Jia Chengzao, Hu Yun Yang

The Kuche Depression is a Mesozoic foreland basin located along the northern margin of the Tarim Basin, China. It is characterized by long, subparallel southdirected thrust faults and folds, which formed in response to uplift of the Tian Shan Mountains to the north. The structural timing of the thrust system as seen on seismic data indicate that there were two main episodes of thrusting: late Jurassic and mid to late Tertiary. This thrusting coincides with the Indosinian and early Himalayan orogenies and helps document the tectonic history of the northern Tarim region.

The earliest evidence for thrusting seen on seismic in the Kuche Depression occurred during the Indosinian orogeny, when the Lhasa plate collided with the Tarim plate. Regional convergence along the proto-Tian Shan mountains formed a series of stacked thrust sheets that appear to ramp over a Paleozoic-aged horst block in the Kuche foreland basin. The floor thrust of this duplex occurs in the basal Triassic lacustrine shale sequence, which may also be one of the principal source rocks in the Kuche Depression. The Paleogene and lower Neogene sections are nearly uniform in thickness across the Depression, indicating that a period of tectonic quiescence followed the first thrusting event.

The second major episode of thrusting occurred during the early Himalayan orogeny, when India collided with southern Asia. This collision reactivated uplift in the Tian Shan Mountains and caused renewed thrusting in the Kuche Depression. A series of out-of-sequence thrusts is seen on seismic, resulting in the southward transport of isolated "piggy-back" basins, further growth of the duplexes, and refolding of previous structures. The dramatic thinning of Miocene and younger units across the crests of the shallow folds, helps time the second thrust episode. Balanced cross-section modeling suggests thrust-related shortening on the order of 35 to 50% and helps unravel the complex structural style in the Kuche Depression. Understanding the structural development of this foreland basin ass sts in reconstructing regional tectonic events and better brackets the interaction between the various plates in northwestern China.

AAPG Search and Discovery Article #91020©1995 AAPG Annual Convention, Houston, Texas, May 5-8, 1995