Abstract

Abstract In the Triassic suture between the Sino‐Korean and Yangtze cratons, the Dabie metamorphic Complex in central China includes three tectonic units: the northern Dabie migmatitic terrane, the central ultrahigh‐P coesite‐ and diamond‐bearing eclogite belt, and the southern high‐P blueschist‐eclogite belt. This complex is bounded to the north by a north‐dipping normal fault with a Paleozoic accretionary complex and to the south by a north‐dipping reverse fault with Yangtze basement plus its foreland fold‐and‐thrust sequence. Great differences in metamorphic pressure suggests that these units reached different depths during metamorphism and their juxtaposition occurred by wedge extrusion of subducted old continental fragments. These units were subsequently subjected to (i) Barrovian type regional metamorphism and deformation at shallow depths; (ii) intrusion of Cretaceous granitic plutons; and (iii) doming and segmentation into several blocks by normal and strike‐slip faults. A new speculative model of tectonic exhumation of UHP rocks is proposed.

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