Abstract

The Zhuguangshan complex hosts the main uranium production area in South China. We report (U-Th)/He and fission track thermochronological data from Triassic–Jurassic mineralized and non-mineralized granites and overlying Cambrian and Cretaceous sandstone units from the Lujing uranium ore field (LUOF) to constrain the upper crustal tectono-thermal evolution of the central Zhuguangshan complex. Two Cambrian sandstones yield reproducible zircon (U-Th)/He (ZHe) ages of 133–106 Ma and low effective uranium (eU) content (270–776 ppm). One Upper Cretaceous sandstone and seven Mesozoic granites are characterized by significant variability in ZHe ages (154–83 Ma and 167–36 Ma, respectively), which show a negative relationship with eU content (244–1098 ppm and 402–4615 ppm), suggesting that the observed age dispersion can be attributed to the effect of radiation damage accumulation on 4He diffusion. Correspondence between ZHe ages from sandstones and granites indicates that surrounding sedimentary rocks and igneous intrusions supplied sediment to the Cretaceous–Paleogene Fengzhou Basin lying adjacent to the LUOF. The concordance of apatite fission track (AFT) central ages (61–54 Ma) and unimodal distributions of confined track lengths of five samples from different rock units suggest that both sandstone and granite samples experienced a similar cooling history throughout the entire apatite partial annealing zone (~110–60 °C). Apatite (U-Th-Sm)/He (AHe) ages from six non-mineralized samples range from 67 to 19 Ma, with no apparent correlation to eU content (2–78 ppm). Thermal history modeling of data suggests that the LUOF experienced relatively rapid Early Cretaceous cooling. In most samples, this was followed by the latest Early Cretaceous–Late Cretaceous reheating and subsequent latest Late Cretaceous–Recent cooling to surface temperatures. This history is considered as a response to the transmission of far-field stresses, involving alternating periods of regional compression and extension, related to paleo-Pacific plate subduction and subsequent rollback followed by Late Paleogene–Recent India–Asia collision and associated uplift and eastward extrusion of the Tibetan Plateau. Thermal history models are consistent with the Fengzhou Basin having been significantly more extensive in the Late Cretaceous–Early Paleogene, covering much of the LUOF. Uranium ore bodies which may have formed prior to the Late Cretaceous may have been eroded by as much as ~1.2 to 4.8 km during the latest Late Cretaceous–Recent denudation.

Highlights

  • South China has experienced a long history of intra-plate tectonic deformation accompanied by multiple periods of granitic magmatism, resulting in a favorable ore mineralization environment [1,2]

  • We present zircon (U-Th)/He (ZHe), apatite fission track (AFT), and Apatite (U-Th-Sm)/He (AHe) data and thermal history models for mineralized and non-mineralized granitoid intrusions and overlying sandstones from the Lujing uranium ore field (LUOF) in order to: (i) reconstruct the Cretaceous–Recent time–temperature (t-T) history, and (ii) assess the state of preservation of the LUOF uranium ore bodies

  • The low-temperature thermochronology data and inverse thermal history modeling results presented in this study suggest that outcropping Cambrian and Cretaceous sedimentary rocks and Triassic–Jurassic granites from the LUOF shared a broadly similar Late

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Summary

Introduction

South China has experienced a long history of intra-plate tectonic deformation accompanied by multiple periods of granitic magmatism, resulting in a favorable ore mineralization environment [1,2]. Vein-type hydrothermal uranium deposits in South China a Late Jurassic–earliest Cretaceous compressive tectonic regime resulting paleo-Pacific plate subduction beneath the Cathaysia Block [10,41,42]. During the ceous and Paleogene, the tectonic setting generally switched from compression to sion due to rollback and eastward retreat of the subduction zone [3,30,42], giving normal reactivation of the Suichuan Fault and the formation of other NE-trendin mal faults in the region. This resulted in formation of the Late Cretaceous–Pal No independent the present-day main areas of granite-related and exo-contact uranium deposits intemperature

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