The Permo-Triassic sedimentological record in the Pai?Khoi area, Arctic Russia: a framework for a better understanding of the evolution and timing of deformation in the Pai-Khoi fold-and-thrust belt
The NW-SE trending Pai-Khoi fold-and-thrust-belt (PKFB) is a key feature of the Arctic Uralides, linking the most northerly sector of the main Uralian orogen, the Polar Urals, with Novaya Zemlya, ~ 600 km to the NW. The PKFB plays a critical role in the tectonic evolution of the Arctic Uralides, yet the onset of deformation within the fold belt is poorly constrained, with estimates ranging from Permian to Triassic. To address this issue the thick Permo-Triassic flysch and molasse deposits, that accumulated during the Uralian Orogeny across the Pai-Khoi region (Korotaikha and Kara basins), were studied to establish environments of deposition, as well as sediment provenance (from clast counts in the field to multi-proxy provenance analyses in the laboratory).
An overall progradation from deep marine Cisuralian deposits to fluvial Guadalupian to Anisian-Ladinian sediments was observed in both the eastern and central part of the Korotaikha Basin, with the eastern part showing more proximal depositional environments. This is consistent with the principal source area of these deposits having been located in the Urals. A profound reconfiguration in palaeocurrent directions within the Triassic succession of the north-central Korotaikha Basin, together with variations in provenance characteristics, is interpreted to constrain the onset of uplift and exhumation in PKFB to be Mid Triassic in age
Meeting Details
Title
The Permo-Triassic sedimentological record in the Pai?Khoi area, Arctic Russia: a framework for a better understanding of the evolution and timing of deformation in the Pai-Khoi fold-and-thrust beltYear
2016Author(s)
Heilbronn, G., Curtis, M.L., López Mir, B. and Mannik, P.Conference
35th International Geological CongressDate(s)
27 August - 4 SeptemberLocation
Cape Town, South AfricaPresentation Type
Poster PresentationURL
People