Crustal azimuthal anisotropy in the Jiaodong Peninsula: Evidence for the suture between the North China Craton and South China Block

2021 ◽  
Vol 314 ◽  
pp. 106705
Author(s):  
Chenglong Wu ◽  
Tao Xu ◽  
Yinshuang Ai ◽  
Weiyu Dong ◽  
Long Li ◽  
...  
2020 ◽  
Vol 222 (2) ◽  
pp. 956-964
Author(s):  
Chenglong Wu ◽  
Tao Xu ◽  
Yinshuang Ai ◽  
Weiyu Dong ◽  
Long Li

SUMMARY The Jiaodong Peninsula consists of the Jiaobei massif and the Northern Sulu UHP massif. These are separated by the Wulian suture zone (WSZ), a key region for understanding the collision between the North China Craton (NCC) and South China Block (SCB). To interpret this collisional zone, a broad-band seismic profile of 20 stations was installed across the WSZ. Shear wave splitting analysis of teleseismic data revealed a contrast in the splitting patterns beneath different structural zones of the Jiaodong Peninsula. The anisotropic structures of the Jiaobei massif and Northern Sulu UHP massif can be explained by a single anisotropic layer model with WNW-ESE or E-W oriented fast directions. In the WSZ, splitting parameters exhibit pronounced variation in backazimuths indicating a two-layer anisotropy pattern. The lower layer exhibits a WNW-ESE fast direction consistent with that observed in the other two regions. Because the fast direction is generally parallel to the present-day direction of Pacific plate subduction, the anisotropy most likely represents asthenospheric return flow in the big mantle wedge caused by Pacific plate subduction. The upper layer exhibits an NE fast direction, that is, parallel to faulting associated with the WSZ. The lithosphere may preserve fossilized anisotropy induced by the Late Triassic collision of the NCC and SCB even after subsequent destruction and thinning from the Late Mesozoic to Cenozoic. We infer that the WSZ represents a lithospheric-scale structural boundary between the NCC and SCB.


Lithos ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 322 ◽  
pp. 312-324 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rui Zhao ◽  
Qingfei Wang ◽  
Jun Deng ◽  
M. Santosh ◽  
Xuefei Liu ◽  
...  

2016 ◽  
Vol 432 ◽  
pp. 1-15 ◽  
Author(s):  
Liang Ma ◽  
Shao-Yong Jiang ◽  
Albrecht W. Hofmann ◽  
Yi-Gang Xu ◽  
Bao-Zhang Dai ◽  
...  

2007 ◽  
Vol 178 (5) ◽  
pp. 353-365 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pierre Vergely ◽  
Ming Jin Hou ◽  
Young Ming Wang ◽  
Jacques-Louis Mercier

Abstract The Tan-Lu Fault zone (TLFZ), often considered as a major sinistral strike-slip fault, extends in a NE to NNE direction for more than 2,000 km in eastern China. A structural analysis of the southern segment of the TLFZ (STLFZ) and surrounding areas enables us to propose the following evolution of this area during the Mesozoic-Palaeocene. The mid-Triassic NNW-SSE and late Triassic SSW-NNE to SSE-NNW strikes of the stretching lineations in the Zhangbaling massif favour ductile shears in a Zhangbaling metamorphic formation located along a ~NNE-SSW orientated “Tan-Lu margin”; this margin connected two margin segments situated north of the Dabie and Sulu belts. During the Mid-Late Triassic, the continental crust of the South China block (SCB) has been obliquely subducted along this margin below the North China block (NCB). We confirm that the SCB continental crust has been sliced and thrust toward the SSE and propose that the ductile thrusts have merged into the decollements of the sedimentary cover of the platform, forming the thrust-and-fold belt which has acted as a sinistral compressional transfer zone between the Dabie and Sulu collision belts. Thrusting and folding, under a N to NNE compression, affecting Jurassic deposits north and south of the Dabie Shan, indicate that the SCB/NCB collision has continued during the Jurassic. We show that a strike-slip tectonic regime occurred at that time, east of the STLFZ, which initiated as a sinistral continental transform fault between the Dabie and Sulu collisional belts. Dikes and strike-slip faults confirm that a ~NW-SE stretching was active during the basal early Cretaceous (~135–130 Ma), in and around metamorphic domes intruded by plutons. We show that strike-slip faulting, under a NW-SE compression-NE-SW tension, has been active subsequently, until the Aptian-? Early Albian (110/105 Ma), possibly until the Cenomanian (~95 Ma); at that time, the TLFZ has acted as a sinistral continental trans-current fault zone in eastern Asia. Subsequently, normal faulting, under a WNW-ESE extension, indicates that the TLFZ has been a normal fault zone during the Campanian-Palaeocene (~83–55 Ma), possibly until the Early Ypresian (~50 Ma). Sinistral offsets, in the order of several 100 of kilometres, on both sides of the TLFZ have been proposed; the present study does not support such large offset magnitudes.


2013 ◽  
Vol 734-737 ◽  
pp. 60-70
Author(s):  
Yu Shi ◽  
Xi Jun Liu ◽  
Zuo Hai Feng

The Qinling orogenic belt (QOB) located between the North China Craton (NCC) and the South China Craton (SCC) is composed of the Northern Qinling Belt (NQB) and the Southern Qinling Belt (SQB). This study presents new geochemical data, zircon U-Pb ages and Hf isotopes from two rocks from the Qinling complex in the NQB. LA-ICP-MS zircon U-Pb dating results suggest that the Qinling complex was formed in early Neoproterozoic and experienced the early Paleozoic metamorphism. HighεHf(t) values of 9.0-12.0 for the early Paleozoic zircons indicated that there is mantle-derived magma intruding into the Qinling complex in the early Paleozoic.


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