Abstract

New U-Pb ages and Hf isotopic data for detrital zircons from the late Paleoproterozoic sedimentary rocks (Suoi Chieng Formation) in the Phan Si Pan Zone of northwest Vietnam constrain their depositional ages, provenance, and tectonic setting. The weighted average age of the youngest coherent zircon population is 1769 ± 31 Ma (MSWD = 1.3, n = 8), which provides a maximum depositional age for the Suoi Chieng Formation. The detrital zircons obtained from six Paleoproterozoic samples exhibit various ages, showing multiple magmatic and metamorphic events. The detrital zircon age pattern shows that magmatic activities in the source areas occurred at 2650 Ma, 2350–2150 Ma, and 2050 Ma, as well as minor activities at 2850 Ma, 1850 Ma, and 1780 Ma. Additionally, a prominent metamorphic age peak is observed around ca. 1850 Ma, while a few metamorphic zircons exhibit ages ranging from 2600 to 2500 Ma and 2100 Ma. This pattern indicates that the primary source of these zircons is the local basement rocks of the Phan Si Pan Zone and SW Yangtze. However, contributions from other adjoining cratonic blocks are also possible and these likely included the Rae craton of North Laurentia. Our new data verifies and expands earlier results, showing that the SW Yangtze and north Yangtze have distinct Archean-Paleoproterozoic crustal evolutionary histories prior to their assembly in the late Paleoproterozoic. Regional correlations based on detrital zircon spectra, stratigraphic and tectono-thermal histories show strong similarities between the SW Yangtze and the Rae craton of north Laurentia throughout the Paleoproterozoic, suggesting the proximity of the two blocks before or during the formation of the Nuna supercontinent. We further suggest that the north Yangtze adjoined southern Siberia in the Archean to late Paleoproterozoic as supported by their identical tectono-thermal histories and detrital zircon age spectra. In combination with published data, we propose that the Yangtze Block was located between north Laurentia and south Siberia during the Nuna assembly.

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