Summary: | The tectonic evolution of the Siberian Cratonic margins offers important clues for global paleogeographic reconstructions, particularly with regard to the complex geological history of Central Asia and Precambrian supercontinents Columbia/Nuna and Rodinia and its subsequent breakup with the opening of the Paleo-Asian Ocean. Here, we present an overview of geochemical, petrological, and geochronological data from a suite of various rocks to clarify the age, tectonic settings, and nature of their protolith, with an emphasis on understanding the tectonic history of the Yenisey Ridge fold-and-thrust belt at the western margin of the Siberian Craton. These pre-Grenville, Grenville, and post-Grenville episodes of regional crustal evolution are correlated with the synchronous successions and similar style of rocks along the Arctic margin of Nuna-Columbia and Rodinia and support the possible spatial proximity of Siberia and North Atlantic cratons (Laurentia and Baltica) over a long period ~1.4–0.55 Ga.
|