Abstract

Discordant biotite 40Ar/39Ar age spectra are commonly reported in the literature. These can be caused by a number of processes related to in vacuo heating, homogenization of the argon distribution, and production of misleadingly flat age spectra. Problematic samples are typically derived from metamorphic belts; thermal overprinting and chloritization are two of the main known causes of disturbed age spectra. Biotite and muscovite of the Waziyü detachment fault, Yiwulüshan metamorphic core complex, Jinzhou, China, yield highly variable 40Ar/39Ar data that hinder reconstruction of their deformation history. We combined mineralogical studies with detailed 40Ar/39Ar dating of biotite, phengitic white mica, and K-feldspar augen from this fault. We infer that argon within the biotite was modified by hydrothermal fluids during fault activity and associated epidotization, chloritization, and muscovitization such that bulk sample step-heating, single grain total fusion, and in situ laser ablation of biotite produced mixed 40Ar/39Ar ages. However, detailed step-heating of biotite shows that this mineral records the ages of cooling and later alteration based on data from a coexisting rigid feldspar porphyroblast and neo-crystallized phengite that record two periods of fault activity at ~120–113 and 18–12 Ma. Our data reveal that the discordant biotite 40Ar/39Ar age spectra might represent a mixed age and that only detailed step-heating methods can extract meaningful geological details of the deformation history of a fault. Therefore, the mineral and the method must be carefully considered if metamorphic or deformed samples are dated.

Highlights

  • Biotite is frequently used in 40 Ar/39 Ar dating

  • We describe a detailed methodological study of 40 Ar/39 Ar dating of biotite from epidotized and muscovitized samples using traditional and detailed step-heating, laser probe, and total fusion techniques

  • Compared with detailed step‐heatingresults, results, firstpeak ageofpeak of these two aws shifted to higher step-heating the the first age these two samples aws samples shifted to higher temperature, but the temperature, but similar

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Summary

Introduction

Biotite is frequently used in 40 Ar/39 Ar dating. disturbed 40 Ar/39 Ar biotite age spectra are common, and the interpretation of biotite ages to produce a thermochronological framework is challenging. Minerals 2020, 10, 648 homogenize radiogenic argon (40 Ar*) gradients within biotite grains to produce flat age spectra [1]. Disturbed age spectra, such as saddle-, staircase-, and hump-shaped age spectra, which are commonly reported in the literature, indicate that homogenization is not always effective [2,3,4,5,6]. Explanations of the disturbed 40 Ar/39 Ar age spectra and derivation of meaningful 40 Ar/39 Ar ages from biotite is a long-standing challenge [2,4,7,8,9,10,11,12]

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