1.8 Billion years of detrital zircon recycling calibrates a refractory part of earth's sedimentary cycle

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Abstract

Detrital zircon studies are providing new insights on the evolution of sedimentary basins but the role of sedimentary recycling remains largely undefined. In a broad region of northwestern North America, this contribution traces the pathway of detrital zircon sand grains from Proterozoic sandstones through Phanerozoic strata and argues for multi-stage sedimentary recycling over more than a billion years. As a test of our hypothesis, integrated palynology and detrital zircon provenance provides clear evidence for erosion of Carboniferous strata in the northern Cordillera as a sediment source for Upper Cretaceous strata. Our results help to calibrate Earth's sedimentary cycle by showing that recycling dominates sedimentary provenance for the refractory mineral zircon.

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Hadlari, T., Swindles, G. T., Galloway, J. M., Bell, K. M., Sulphur, K. C., Heaman, L. M., … Fallas, K. M. (2015). 1.8 Billion years of detrital zircon recycling calibrates a refractory part of earth’s sedimentary cycle. PLoS ONE, 10(12). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0144727

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