Abstract

The eastern Wolhyeonri complex in the southwestern Gyeonggi Massif, South Korea, which has a close affinity with the northern margin of the South China Craton, primarily consists of Neoproterozoic igneous and sedimentary rocks that were metamorphosed by the middle Paleozoic thermal event. In this study, we present the results from thermobarometry, whole-rock chemistry, and zircon geochronology of rocks in the eastern Wolhyeonri complex near Gwangcheon. The main rock type, such as the migmatitic biotite gneisses, was deposited after ca. 722–680 Ma, and the associated foliated amphibolites exhibit a rift-related Neoproterozoic origin. The ca. 845–820 Ma arc-related metadolerite and mafic layer in the metavolcanic-sedimentary unit are also exposed. Two Neoproterozoic magmatic events support the idea that the southwestern Gyeonggi Massif developed along the northern margin of the South China Craton. These Neoproterozoic rocks experienced upper amphibolite-facies (7–10.5 kbar and 710–735 °C) to low-pressure granulite-facies metamorphism (10.5–12.0 kbar and 810–830 °C) during 424–412 Ma, were associated with ca. 418 Ma leucogranite formation, and then underwent retrograde amphibolite-facies metamorphism. Combined with the results from previous studies, the early-middle Paleozoic orogeny in the southern Gyeonggi Massif is characterized by 470–456 Ma subduction associated with a high P/T metamorphism, and the initiation of intermediate P/T metamorphism from ca. 445 Ma followed by low-pressure granulite-facies metamorphism at 432–403 Ma, and high-pressure granulite-facies metamorphism at 392–381 Ma, indicating that the tectonic setting transitioned from a continental collision to a post-collisional setting between 432 Ma and 392 Ma. These events and the absence of Paleozoic ultrahigh-pressure metamorphism strongly correlated with the Wuyi-Yunkai orogen in the South China Craton, rather than the Qinling belt in the North China Craton. Therefore, the early-middle Paleozoic orogeny in the southern Gyeonggi Massif was caused by the subduction and subsequent collision within the South China Craton.

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