International audienceThis study provides new low-temperature thermochronometric data, mainly apatite fission track data on the basement rocks in and adjacent to the Talas-Fergana Fault, in the Kyrgyz Tien Shan in the first place. In the second place, we also present new detrital apatite fission track data on the Meso-Cenozoic sediments from fault related basins and surrounding intramontane basins. Our results confirm multi-staged Meso-Cenozoic tectonic activity, possibly induced by the accretion of the so-called Cimmerian blocks to the Eurasian margin. New evidence for this multi-staged thermo-tectonic activity is found in the data of both basement and Meso-Cenozoic sediment samples in or close to the Talas-Fergana Fault. Zircon (U–Th)/He and apatite fission track data constrain rapid Late Triassic–Early Jurassic and Late Jurassic–Early Cretaceous basement cooling in the Kyrgyz Tien Shan around 200 Ma and 130–100 Ma respectively. Detrital apatite fission track results indicate a different burial history on both sides of the Talas-Fergana Fault. The apatite fission track system of the Jurassic sediments in the Middle Tien Shan unit east of the Talas-Fergana Fault is not reset, while the Jurassic sediments in the Fergana Basin and Yarkand-Fergana Basin, west of the fault zone, are partially and in some cases even totally reset. The totally reset samples exhibit Oligocene and Miocene ages and evidence the Cenozoic reactivation of the western Kyrgyz Tien Shan as a consequence of the India-Eurasia convergence
International audienceNew insights in the Mesozoic geodynamic evolution and related basin-range interactions in the Kyrgyz Tien Shan were obtained based on new sedimentological and detrital zircon U-Pb (LA-ICP-MS) results from Jurassic to Paleogene sedimentary sequences. Studied sedimentary sections are located in the Fergana and Yarkand-Fergana basins to the west of the Talas-Fergana Fault (TFF) and in the Issyk-Kul and Ming-Kush-Kökömeren basins to the east. The ages of the Phanerozoic zircon grains found in 18 Jurassic to Paleogene sandstones can be divided into four groups: Caledonian (470–390 Ma), Hercynian (315–260 Ma), Triassic (250–210 Ma) and Jurassic (190–160 Ma) ages. The differences in sedimentation pattern and zircon U-Pb results suggest that the TFF played an important role in the distribution of the sedimentary deposits in the Mesozoic. During the Early - Middle Jurassic, the TFF was active and the strongest subsidence occurred in the Yarkand-Fergana Basin. The provenance of its sediments can be explained both by local sources close to the TFF and by more distal sources to the (south)west, probably stretching into the present-day Pamir. During the Late Jurassic – Early Cretaceous, renewed compression led to the inversion of the Yarkand-Fergana Basin. Around the Jurassic – Cretaceous transition, large alluvial fans developing in a semi-arid to arid climate traceable around the whole Tien Shan were also deposited in the Fergana Basin. A mafic sill intruded within these alluvial fans provides an emplacement age of 144 ± 8 Ma (apatite U-Pb) indicating (sub)volcanic activity during the Early Cretaceous. During the Late Cretaceous to early Paleogene, the area to the west of the TFF experienced marine incursions related to the proto-Paratethys Sea. The dominance of Caledonian ages in the Upper Cretaceous – lower Paleogene detrital samples indicates a change in provenance whereby the drainage areas became larger towards low-relief land area east of the TFF
This data article provides zircon U–Pb and Lu–Hf isotopic information along with whole-rock Sm–Nd, Sr and Pb isotopic geochemistry from granitoids in Thailand. The U–Pb ages are described and the classification of crystallisation and inherited ages are explained. The petrography of the granitoid samples is detailed. The data presented in this article are interpreted and discussed in the research article entitled “Probing into Thailand’s basement: New insights from U–Pb geochronology, Sr, Sm–Nd, Pb and Lu–Hf isotopic systems from granitoids” (Dew et al., 2018).
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