Abstract

Cathaysia Block in South China had accreted tremendous amounts of Mesozoic magmatic rocks. Recent zircon UPb age results revealed existence of some Early Jurassic gneissic granites (200–190 Ma) in the Pingtan-Dongshan Metamorphic Belt (PDMB), coastal SE China which corresponds one stage of magmatic quiescence in the rest part of East Cathaysia. To better understand Mesozoic thermal evolution of the PDMB, UPb geochronology and Hf isotope composition of zircon separates (LA-ICPMS) and inclusions (NanoSIMS, age only) are examined for two granitic rocks and one meta-sandstone in Pingtan area (northern PDMB) and three granites in Matsu Islands further north. For Pingtan rocks, ages of discrete zircons give two Early Jurassic ages (196 Ma and 173 Ma) and prossess in dominance positive ɛHf(t) values (−0.2 to 7.5). On the other hand, zircon inclusions within rock-forming minerals yield a wide age span from Permo-Triassic to Early Cretaceous in six clusters, namely 270–206 Ma, 191–170 Ma, 168–151 Ma, 146–132 Ma, 126–119 Ma and 109–100 Ma that basically coincide the major Mesozoic thermal episodes in Cathaysia except the second cluster. For Matsu granites, discrete zircons exhibit Late Jurassic (162–158 Ma) and Early Cretaceous (137 Ma) ages with ɛHf(t) values of −9.1 to −1.6 and −4.9 to −0.8, respectively. Nevertheless, zircon inclusions show ages corresponding to Pingtan samples in the last four clusters. With reference to Mesozoic magmatic rock units in the neighboring Southeast China Magmatic Belt (SCMB), our data suggest irrelevance of Pingtan samples to the Cathaysia and linkage of off-shore Matsu granites to the PDMB. Noting that there are similarities of zircon ages and ɛHf(t) values between the granite-schist associations in Tananao Metamorphic Belt (TMB) of eastern Taiwan and Pingtan island of northern PDMB, these Early Jurassic granites were probably originated from a same source. Three consistent Early Cretaceous age clusters of zircon inclusions over the studied samples match two well-known magma prevailing episodes in the coastal SE China, with one tectonic episode (128–119 Ma) in the PDMB that is often invisible from the zircon separates remains unexplainable. In response to a plausible tectonic evolution, we support the earlier proposition for a now-concealed microcontinent that had impinged on Cathaysia around 125 Ma, but further suggest that it left Pingtan Island behind as a remnant fragment when drifted away at later time.

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