Abstract

AbstractIn this review, we attempted to summarize and interpret the Phanerozoic geology and mineralization following the article (vol. 71 in Resource Geology) which reviewed the Precambrian geology and mineralization of North Korea. The basement of the Korean peninsula was built during the Precambrian and gradually became more evolved and complex during the Phanerozoic. The northern part of the peninsula was in the active and passive continental margins of the Korea–China platform during the Phanerozoic. In the tectonic environments of the Phanerozoic, the tectonic provinces of North Korea comprise several Paleozoic–Mesozoic intracontinental and rift basins as well as Cenozoic ocean border and rift basins. During the Paleozoic, the sedimentary strata were formed within the marine‐to‐nonmarine intracontinental basins, such as the largest Pyeongnam and Hyesan–Iwon basin, Imjingang rift basin, and several small structural basins, and the sedimentary type of limestone, dolomite, and coal deposits were formed. Mesozoic orogenic events in the peninsula were the most overwhelming geologic event causing block movements through collision and subduction of the paleo‐Pacific plate. Songrim orogeny (late Permian to early Triassic) might be caused by continental collision associated with strong deformation, metamorphism, and granite intrusion. Daebo orogeny (Jurassic) resumed the crustal deformation under a contractional setting during the subduction and caused dextral ductile shearing, magmatism, and metamorphism in the entire peninsula. Amnokgang orogeny, corresponding to Bulguksa orogeny in South Korea, during the Cretaceous formed several pull‐apart or transtensional basins probably because of oblique subduction of the Izanagi plate, and nonmarine sedimentary and pyroclastic sequences were deposited in the basin. The mineralization related to the Mesozoic plutonism was the most dominant in the peninsula. The considerable mineral deposits are ultramafic related magmatic Ni deposits owing to rift magmatism and granite related hydrothermal Au–Ag, Cu, Pb–Zn, Fe, W, and Mo deposits caused by the subduction of paleo‐Pacific plate. During the Tertiary, several structural basins under the extensional regime were overprinted on the Mesozoic basins in the northern part of the peninsula. They contain marine and nonmarine sedimentary rocks and felsic–mafic extrusives. Some sedimentary deposits, such as coal, kaolin, bentonite, diatomite, and zeolite, were formed. The Tertiary Pohang basin in South Korea shows basin geology, magmatism, and mineralization similar to those of North Korea. The Phanerozoic geotectonics of the peninsula are characterized by the evolution of the structural basins and violent magmatism. The peninsula is located on the Amur plate, bounded by the Philippine plate, Pacific plate, and Eurasian plate. Since Phanerozoic, the peninsula's geographic position created an important tectonic link between northeastern China and the Japanese Islands throughout geotectonic evolution.

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