Estimating the paleobasin depth is one of the most difficult problems in studying the evolution of sedimentation. Considerable depth variations in ocean and shelf paleobasins are due not only to their origin but also to the evolution of their large constituents owing to the differentiation of the dissected bottom. The Early Paleozoic volcanic-sedimentary and sedimentary rocks of Gorny Altai have been studied from this standpoint. They formed in the paleoceanic rises of the Early Cambrian Kuznetsk–Altai island arc, in the Late Cambrian–Early Ordovician Altai segment of the Paleoasian Ocean, and in the outer zone of the Late Ordovician Altai shelf basin. Geologic, geochemical, and lithofacies data permitted expert estimates of the absolute vertical depths of individual paleobasin fragments with siliceous sedimentation, calibrated at the final stage by bioindicator methods. The upper parts of the paleoceanic rises in the Early Cambrian Kuznetsk–Altai island arc are presumed to occur at depths of 300–400 m; those of the paleoceanic rises in the Late Cambrian–Early Ordovician Altai segment of the Paleoasian Ocean, at depths of 500–1200 m; and the outer edge of the outer zone of the Late Ordovician Altai shelf basin, at depths of 150–500 m.
The structure of the Lower–Middle Ordovician Tuloi and Karasa Formations, which occur widely in northeastern Gorny Altai, has been studied. A bed-by-bed description of a new section of the boundary sediments between these stratigraphic units has been given. The graptolite, trilobite, and brachiopod assemblages typical of the Tuloi and Karasa Formations have been analyzed. Graptolite zones and subzones have been recognized, which permit correlating the stratotype and key sections of these local stratigraphic units with the stages of the International Stratigraphic Chart (ISC). The Karasa Formation occupies a considerably larger stratigraphic volume than presumed: It spans the late Arenig and the entire Llanvirn (including the Llandeilo) of the British standard, which is used in Russia (=Upper Dapingian–Darriwilian of the new Ordovician standard in the ISC). Finally, the paper discusses the suggested changes in the names of regional stratigraphic units (horizons) in the Ordovician stratigraphic chart of the western Altai–Sayan fold belt.
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