Abstract
Orogens with multiple (ultra)high‐pressure ((U)HP) and (ultra)high‐temperature ((U)HT) metamorphic events provide a complex but telling record of oceanic and continental interaction. The Early Paleozoic history of the “Heart of China,” the Qinling orogenic collage, offers snapshots of at least three (U)HP and two (U)HT metamorphic events. The preservation of remnants of both oceanic and continental domains together with a ≥110 Myr record of magmatism allows the reconstruction of the processes that resulted in this disparate metamorphism. Herein, we first illuminate the pressure‐temperature‐time (P‐T‐t) evolution of the Early Paleozoic (U)HP and (U)HT events by refining the petrographic descriptions and P‐T estimates, assess published, and employ new U/Th‐Pb zircon, monazite, and titanite, and40Ar‐39Ar phengite geochronology to date the magmatic and metamorphic events. Then we explore how the metamorphic and magmatic events are related tectonically and how they elucidate the affinities among the various complexes in the Qinling orogenic collage. We argue that a Meso‐Neoproterozoic crustal fragment—the Qinling complex—localized subduction‐accretion events that involved subduction, oceanic‐arc formation, and back‐arc spreading along its northern margin, and mtantle‐wedge exhumation and spreading‐ridge subduction along its southern margin.
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