Tectonically-controlled infilling of the eastern Nihewan Basin, North China, since the middle Pleistocene

2016 
There has been a significant debate about the nature and causes of the Pleistocene evolution of the Nihewan Basin, North China. We studied the eastern Nihewan Basin sedimentary facies at two main sites, Hutouliang and Donggou. A combination of field observations and measurements of sediment grain-size distribution was used to reconstruct the sequence of sedimentary environments since the middle Pleistocene, and optically-stimulated luminescence measurements were used to date the sediments. Our results indicate that a shallow lake occupied the basin center along the Sanggan River, probably lasting until ~440 kyr ago before disappearing completely ~340 kyr ago. It was succeeded by a phase of fluvial-dominated sediment accumulation which ended ~30 kyr ago. We suggest that the formation of the gorge resulted from the relative uplift of the Niuxin Mountain along the Liulengshan fault ~140 kyr ago. However, since ~30 kyr ago the fault may have become inactive and the river downcutting near Shixia was no longer offset by the relative uplift, which caused a shift from deposition to denudation in the Nihewan Basin from then on. The disappearance of the paleolake ~340 kyr ago may have been the culmination of the ongoing process of basin infilling.
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