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Mesozoic radiolarian faunas from the northwest Ilocos Region,Luzon, Philippines and their tectonic significance
Authors:Karlo L. Queaño  Edanjarlo J. Marquez  Carla B. Dimalanta  Jonathan C. Aitchison  Jason R. Ali  Graciano P. Yumul Jr
Affiliation:1. School of Civil, Environmental and Geological Engineering, Mapua Institute of Technology, Intramuros, Philippines 1002;2. Apex Mining Company, Inc. Ortigas Center, Pasig City, Philippines 1605;3. Department of Physical Sciences and Mathematics, University of the Philippines Manila, Manila, Philippines 1000;4. Rushurgent Working Group, National Institute of Geological Sciences, College of Science, University of the Philippines, Quezon City, Philippines 1101;5. School of Earth and Environmental Sciences Faculty of Science, University of Queensland, Brisbane, QLD, 4072, Australia;6. Department of Earth Sciences, The University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong, China
Abstract:Northwestern Ilocos Norte in Luzon, Philippines, exposes cherts, peridotite and a variety of metamorphic rocks including chlorite schist, quartzo‐feldspathic schist, muscovite schist and actinolite schist. These rocks are incorporated within a tectonic mélange, the Dos Hermanos Mélange, which is thrust onto the turbidite succession of the Eocene Bangui Formation and capped by the Upper Miocene Pasuquin Limestone. The radiolarian assemblages constrain the stratigraphic range of the cherts to the uppermost Jurassic to Lower Cretaceous. Stratigraphically important species include Eucyrtidiellum pyramis (Aita), Hiscocapsa acuta (Hull), Protunuma japonicus (Matsuoka & Yao), Archeodictyomitra montisserei (Squinabol), Hiscocapsa asseni (Tan), Cryptamphorella conara (Foreman) and Pseudodictyomitra carpatica (Lozyniak). The radiolarian biostratigraphic data provide evidence for the existence of a Mesozoic basinal source from which the cherts and associated rocks were derived. Crucial to determining the origin of these rocks is their distribution and resemblance with known mélange outcrops in Central Philippines. The mélange in the northwestern Ilocos region bears similarities in terms of age and composition with those noted in the western part of the Central Philippines, particularly in the islands of Romblon, Mindoro and Panay. The existence of tectonic mélanges in the Central Philippines has been attributed to the Early to Middle Miocene arc–continent collision. This event involved the Philippine Mobile Belt and the Palawan Microcontinental Block, a terrane that drifted from the southeastern margin of mainland Asia following the opening of the South China Sea. Such arc–continent collision event could also well explain the existence of a tectonic mélange in northwestern Luzon.
Keywords:arc‐continent collision  Luzon  Mesozoic basin  radiolarians  tectonic mé  lange
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