Publication | Open Access
Palaeoproterozoic arc magmatism and collision in Liaodong Peninsula (north‐east China)
218
Citations
18
References
2004
Year
Marine GeologyVolcanologyLiaodong PeninsulaStructural GeologyNorth China BlockThrust TectonicsAnshan Archean BlockEngineeringTectonic EvolutionEast Asian LanguagesGeologyEconomic GeologyGeochronologyPetrologyEarth ScienceRegional GeologyCratonTectonics
Abstract In the north‐eastern part of the North China Block, a mafic magmatic belt consisting of mafic–ultramafic rocks and marine sedimentary rocks crops out between the northern Archean Anshan Block and a southern Palaeoproterozoic Block. 40 Ar/ 39 Ar amphibole ages around 1.9 Ga from gabbros, and trace element analyses of gabbros, pyroxenite and shale show that these rocks formed along a Palaeoproterozoic active continental margin. The mafic magmatic belt is interpreted as an arc developed above a south‐directed subduction zone, which was subsequently overthrust to the north upon the Anshan Archean Block. This study provides a new example agreeing with increasing evidence supporting plate mobility and thrust tectonics during the Palaeoproterozoic. These new insights must be considered with regard to the formation of the North China Block by magmatic accretion and tectonic collision.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1