2009
DOI: 10.1016/j.rgg.2009.03.010
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The western part of the West Siberian petroleum megabasin: geologic history and structure of the basement

Abstract: On the basis of complex research into the western part of the West Siberian Plate, a new scheme of the structure-formation zones of its basement has been developed and a new geological map of its pre-Jurassic basement has been compiled. Ophiolites and other mafic-ultramafic complexes (fragments of the oceanic Earth’s crust) were studied. The most complete Late Ordovician ophiolite complex comprising a melange of serpentinites, gabbroids, plagiogranites, and basalt with jasper interbeds lies in the Shaim area. … Show more

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Cited by 18 publications
(12 citation statements)
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“…This tectonism was the culmination associated with the closure of the Neoproterozoic-Palaeozoic Paleoasian Ocean and assemblage of the Pangaea Supercontinent. Presently, rocks affected by the Uralian compression are exposed in the Ural Mountains and in the Taimyr Peninsula, while a major part of this tectonic assemblage is deeply buried under the Mesozoic West Siberian Basin and can only be characterized by deep exploratory wells [54,55].…”
Section: Late Palaeozoic Uralian and Taimyr Fold Beltsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This tectonism was the culmination associated with the closure of the Neoproterozoic-Palaeozoic Paleoasian Ocean and assemblage of the Pangaea Supercontinent. Presently, rocks affected by the Uralian compression are exposed in the Ural Mountains and in the Taimyr Peninsula, while a major part of this tectonic assemblage is deeply buried under the Mesozoic West Siberian Basin and can only be characterized by deep exploratory wells [54,55].…”
Section: Late Palaeozoic Uralian and Taimyr Fold Beltsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…To the north‐west, and to both sides perpendicular to its strike, the KTFZ is overlain by the Meso–Cenozoic cover of the West Siberian Basin (WSB). Available drill‐hole data confirm the wide distribution of Devonian–Carboniferous volcanic and sedimentary units, as well as Carboniferous granites in the WSB folded basement (Isaev, ; Ivanov, Erokhin, Ponomarev, Pogromskaya, & Berzin, ; Ivanov, Koroteev, Pecherkin, Fedorov, & Erokhin, ).…”
Section: Geological Settingmentioning
confidence: 77%
“…The first hypothesis is less likely due to the very rare occurrence of “Siberian” zircons with ages of 2.0–1.8 Ga in the samples (four grains in the each detrital sample). The third possibility is also unlikely, because in the most proximal part of the West Siberian Basin, its folded basement mainly consists of Late Palaeozoic sediments and magmatic rocks, and there is little or no evidence for the existence of Precambrian massifs in this location (Cherepanova, Artemieva, Thybo, & Chemia, ; Isaev, ; Ivanov et al, ; Ivanov et al, ; Ivanov, Fedorov, Ronkin, & Erokhin, ; Kungurtsev et al, ; Yolkin et al, ). Hence, the most probable sources of the Neoproterozoic zircons are the Tuva–Mongolia and/or Atai–Mongolia microcontinents.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The compositions of the studied metamorphic rocks from the Shaimsk-Kuznetsovsk meganticlinorium form a narrow range of values and fall into the field of greywackes and melanowackes. It is likely that the greywackes, whose strata are likely to have formed under erosion of ophiolitic rocks described in the region [2], considerably served as a substrate for them. This fact is also proved because in general the zircons from both samples have typical magmatic appearance and do not exhibit any rounding (transfer in the fragmental composition).…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%