Abstract

The Imjingang belt, which is located between the Nangrim and Gyeonggi Massifs, is divided into the Imjin group in the north and the Samgot unit in the south. The southeastern part of the Imjin group, which is located within South Korea, is called the Jingok unit. The Samgot unit consists of amphibolite, psammitic schist, meta-alkali granite and meta-calc-silicate rock. The amphibolite experienced prograde metamorphism from 648-550 °C/13-11 kbar to 715 °C/11 kbar and was then retrograded to ca. 579-569 °C/6.7-6.3 kbar. The psammitic schist was metamorphosed at ca. 710 °C/11 kbar and then retrograded to ca. 670-660 °C/11-10 kbar. These data indicate that the Samgot unit underwent clockwise prograde metamorphism with peak metamorphism conditions of 715-710 °C/11 kbar, which is confirmed by pseudosection analysis. The results of this and previous studies indicate that the metamorphic grade increases southward from the garnet and staurolite zones (630-500 °C/9-3 kbar) through the kyanite zone (710-665 °C/9 kbar) in the Jingok unit to the Samgot unit (715-710 °C/11 kbar) of the Imjingang belt. This metamorphic pattern indicates that the Imjingang belt underwent regional intermediate-P/T metamorphism. The SHRIMP U-Pb age dating of zircons from the amphibolite and meta-alkali granite yields intrusion ages of ca. 371-361 Ma and 373 Ma, respectively. From the psammitic schist, ages of ca. 401-370 Ma are obtained from the youngest detrital zircons and ages of ca. 251-249 Ma are obtained from the metamorphic zircons. In addition, the SHRIMP U-Pb age dating of titanite from the amphibolite yields a retrograde metamorphic age of ca. 229-214 Ma. The whole-rock chemical composition of the amphibolite plots in the back-arc basin basalt field on the tectonic discrimination diagrams. These data indicate that the Imjingang belt, including the Samgot unit, consists of Devonian sedimentary rocks that were deposited in a back-arc basin and intruded by mafic and felsic igneous rocks at ca. 373-361 Ma. Finally, the Imjingang belt underwent intermediate-P/T metamorphism during the Triassic (251–249 Ma) instead of high-P/T metamorphism, indicating that the Imjingang belt is not the extension of the Dabie-Sulu collision belt but a back-arc basin within the North China Craton that underwent intermediate-P/T metamorphism due to the closure of the back-arc basin (arc-continent collision) during the collision between the North and South China Cratons along the Hongseong-Odesan collision belt within the Gyeonggi Massif.

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