Abstract

To constrain the timing of collisional event in the Indochina block, SHRIMP U-Pb dating and REE analyses of zircon were carried out for two paragneiss samples of the Kham Duc Complex, central Vietnam. Both samples contain kyanite, staurolite, and zoisite as relics from an early metamorphic stage (M1), and biotite and sillimanite as major minerals constituting the foliation formed during the late metamorphic stage (M2). The change in mineral assemblages indicates a clockwise P-T path composed of a high- or medium-P + low-T stage (M1) and a subsequent low- P + high-T stage (M2). The U-Pb concordia ages of zircon rims are 447 ± 6 Ma and 452 ± 6 Ma for the two samples, respectively. These results are distinctly different from the available Ar-Ar mineral ages of 254–225 Ma. Following the clockwise P-T path and phase equilibrium analyses of the Complex, we suggest that the zircon rims were formed near peak temperatures during the decompression. The ∼450 Ma zircon rim thus gives the minimum age constraint for a possible crustal thickening event during Early Paleozoic, whereas the reported Permo-Triassic Ar-Ar ages would result from an Indosinian overprint. This Early Paleozoic event is most likely related to a collisional orogeny between the Indochina and South China blocks. Late Neoproterozoic to Neoarchean ages are recorded from detrital zircon cores of the Kham Duc Complex, the Kontum Massif and Truong Son Belt, suggesting that their protoliths might have derived from sediments at the Gondwana margin.

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