Abstract

In this study, petrological, structural, geochemical, and geochronological analyses of the Statherian alkali feldspar granite and porphyritic alkali feldspar granite in the southwestern part of the Korean Peninsula were conducted to examine petrogenesis of the granitoids and their tectonic setting. Zircon U-Pb dating revealed that the two granites formed around 1.71 Ga and 1.70–1.68 Ga, respectively. The results of the geochemical analyses showed that both of the granites have a high content of K2O, Nb, Ta, and Y, as well as high FeOt/MgO and Ga/Al ratios. Both granites have alkali-calcic characteristics with a ferroan composition, indicating an A-type affinity. Zircon Lu-Hf isotopic compositions yielded negative εHf(t) values (−3.5 to −10.6), indicating a derivation from ancient crustal materials. Both granite types underwent ductile deformation and exhibited a dextral sense of shear with a minor extension component. Based on field relationships and zircon U-Pb dating, it was considered that the deformation event postdated the emplacement of the alkali feldspar granite and terminated soon after the emplacement of the porphyritic alkali feldspar granite in an extensional setting. These data indicated that there were extension-related magmatic activities accompanying ductile deformation in the southwestern part of the Korean Peninsula during 1.71–1.68 Ga. The Statherian extension-related events are well correlated with those in the midwestern part of the Korean and eastern parts of the North China Craton.

Highlights

  • The Wilson cycle [1] is closely associated with the formation and destruction of orogenic belts and related cratonic blocks

  • The late Paleoproterozoic magmatism and deformation in the southwestern part of the Korean Peninsula can provide the crucial information needed to understand the tectonic evolution of northeast Asia

  • The Paleoproterozoic alkali feldspar granite (AFG) and porphyritic alkali feldspar granite (PAFG) were mostly affected by ductile shearing parallel to the regional shear zones

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Summary

Introduction

The Wilson cycle [1] is closely associated with the formation and destruction of orogenic belts and related cratonic blocks. The extension-related magmatism has produced igneous rocks that have mafic to felsic bimodal compositions in the northwestern area of the eastern part of the NCC [10,11,12,13,14], the southern part of the NCC [8,15], and the western part of the Nangnim and Gyeonggi massifs in the Korean Peninsula [9,16] during 1.80–1.60 Ga. Integrated geochemical studies suggest that igneous rocks were formed in post-orogenic and/or anorogenic settings after the continental collision [8,14].

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