Ordos Block
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The Ordos Block is a crustal block, that forms part of the larger North China Block (NCB). It is surrounded by active fault systems and has been a distinct block since at least the Mesozoic. It is bordered to the west by the Alxa Block, the westernmost part of the NCB, to the south by the Qinling orogenic belt, to the north by the Yanshan-Yinshan orogenic belt, part of the Central Asian Orogenic Belt and to the east by the Taihang Mountains, which form part of the Trans-North China Orogen.[1] The block is currently stable and large earthquakes are restricted to the bordering fault zones. It has been suggested that the block is currently undergoing anti-clockwise rotation with respect to the Eurasian Plate, as a result of the ongoing eastward spreading of the Tibetan Plateau,[2] although this view has been challenged.[3]
The Ordos Block is a roughly rectangular fault-bounded part of the larger North China Block, which itself closely matches the extent of the Paleoproterozoic North China Craton. It covers an area of about 250,000 km2 and has a thick lithosphere of more than 200 km, suggesting that, unlike other parts of the NCB, it retains a fully cratonic character.[4]
Geology
The shallow geology of Ordos Block consists of a thick sequence of Phanerozoic sedimentary rocks in what is known as the Ordos Basin. There are three main sequences, of Lower Paleozoic, Upper Paleozoic and Mesozoic age. The Lower Paleozoic sequence consists of mainly carbonate rocks ranging from middle Cambrian to lower Ordovician in age. Following a regional unconformity associated with the Caledonian orogeny, sedimentation resumed during the Carboniferous and continued through the Permian with a sequence of clastic sedimentary rocks, including significant thicknesses of coal. The overlying Mesozoic sequence consist of mainly fluvial and lacustrine deposits. The youngest unit preserved in the basin is of Lower Cretaceous age, with any younger parts of the sequence having been eroded following uplift during the Neogene.[5] This erosion surface is covered in the southern part of the block by Upper Neogene to Quaternary deposits of red clay and loess, part of the Loess Plateau.[6]
The understanding of the deep geology of the Ordos Block is based on the interpretation of gravity and magnetic data, backed up by a limited amount of deep borehole samples, yielding geochronological and isotope data. On the basis of this dataset, the block appears to be divided into a northern and southern part with contrasting histories. They are juxtaposed across the northwest–southeast trending Datong-Huachi fault. The northern part consists mainly of partly migmatised metasedimentary rocks with granitic gneisses. They are partly of Neoarchean age, with reworking at several periods during the Paleoproterozoic. The southern part is thought be of Paleoarchean to Mesoarchean in age, with some Neoarchean additions.[7]