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Cratonic reactivation and orogeny: An example from the northern margin of the North China Craton
Institution:1. Institute of Earth Science, China University of Geosciences, Beijing 100083, China;2. Institute of Geology, Chinese Academy of Geological Sciences, Beijing 100037, China;3. Institute of Tianjin Mineral and Geology Resources, Tianjin 300170, China;1. College of Earth Sciences, Jilin University, Changchun 130061, China;2. Hubei Selenium Industrial Research Institute, Hubei Geological Bureau, Wuhan 430034, China;3. State Key Laboratory of Geological Processes and Mineral Resources, China University of Geosciences, Wuhan 430074, China;1. School of Resource and Environmental Engineering, Hefei University of Technology, Hefei, China;2. Tianjin Institute of Geology and Mineral Resources, China Geological Survey, Tianjin, China;3. Department of Earth Sciences, Western University, London, Canada;1. State Key Laboratory of Continental Dynamics, Department of Geology, Northwest University, Xi''an 710069, China;2. Department of Earth Sciences, University of Hong Kong, Hong Kong, China;3. Institute of Geomechanics, Chinese Academy of Geological Sciences, Beijing 100081, China;1. Key Laboratory of Orogenic Belts and Crustal Evolution, Peking University, Beijing, 100871, China;2. Department of Geosciences, National Taiwan University, Taipei, 10617, Taiwan
Abstract:Reactivation of cratonic basement involves a number of processes including extension, compression, and/or lithospheric delamination. The northern margin of the North China Craton (NCC), adjacent to the Inner Mongolian Orogenic Belt, was reactivated in the Late Paleozoic to Early Mesozoic. During this period, the northern margin of the NCC underwent magmatism, N–S compression, regional exhumation, and uplift, including the formation of E–W-trending thick-skinned and thin-skinned south-verging folds and south-verging ductile shear zones. zircon U–Pb SHRIMP ages for mylonite protoliths in shear zones which show ages of 310–290 Ma (mid Carboniferous–Early Permian), constraining the earliest possible age of deformation. Muscovite within carbonate and quartz–feldspar–muscovite mylonites from the Kangbao–Weichang and Fengning–Longhua shear zones defines a stretching lineation and gives 40Ar/39Ar ages of 270–250 Ma, 250–230 Ma, 230–210 Ma, and 210–190 Ma. Deformation developed progressively from north to south between the Late Paleozoic and Triassic. Exhumation of lower crustal gneisses, high-pressure granulites, and granites occurred at the cratonic margin during post-ductile shearing (~ 220–210 Ma). An undeformed Early Jurassic (190–180 Ma) conglomerate overlies the deformed rocks and provides an upper age limit for reactivation and orogenesis. Deformation was induced by convergence between the southern Mongolia and North China cratonic blocks, and the location of this convergent belt controlled later deformation in the Yanshan Tectonic Province. This province formed as older E–W-trending Archean–Proterozoic sequences were reactivated along the northern margin of the NCC. This reactivation has features typical of cratonic basement reactivation: compression, crustal thickening, remelting of the mid to lower crust, and subsequent orogenesis adjacent to the orogenic belt.
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