1 Introduction
It is well acknowledged that Asia was formed by multiple collisions of continental blocks since the Proterozoic. The North China Block (NCB) and the South China Block (SCB) are two of these major cratons that are welded along the Qinling–Dabie–Sulu Belt. This chain became very famous when ultrahigh-pressure (UHP) rocks were discovered there [31,37,40] (Fig. 1). The protoliths of these UHP rocks are Proterozoic SCB-derived continental rocks, namely mafic dykes, granites, marbles, and quartzites. The UHP metamorphism developed during the north-directed subduction of SCB below NCB. Thus, it is tempting to conclude that the age of the NCB–SCB collision is the same as that of the UHP metamorphism. Numerous geochronological studies of the metamorphic rocks provide radiometric ages ranging from Neoproterozoic to Cretaceous (e.g., [1,11–13,32, and enclosed references]). As a matter of fact, numerous U–Pb, Sm–Nd and 40Ar/39Ar ages cluster around 240–210 Ma and therefore, a Triassic age is widely accepted for the age of the NCB–SCB collision [13,20,25, and enclosed references].
Furthermore, field studies led to contrasted conclusions. A pioneer work in eastern Qinling and Dabieshan argued for an Early Palaeozoic collision followed by a Triassic intracontinental deformation [27,28,40]. This view was also supported by some radiometric dates [35,46,49]. Nevertheless, based on most of radiometric ages yielded by the UHP rocks and in spite of rare structural data, most of authors favour a Triassic collision. In addition to the time problem, several questions are still imperfectly answered. Namely, (i) what is the bulk architecture of the belt? (ii) where is the suture zone? (iii) is there a magmatic arc attesting to the northward subduction?; (iv) if not collisional, what is the geodynamic significance of the Triassic event? In the following, some answers to these questions are proposed. After presenting a bulk cross section through the eastern Qinling belt, an interpretative geodynamic model trying to account for the evolution of the Qinling Belt and the age of the UHP metamorphism is discussed.
2 A cross section through the eastern Qinling Belt
Due to the Late Mesozoic and Cenozoic tectonics, the western part of the Qinling Belt is formed by narrow parallel stripes of highly dipping rocks separated by wrench faults. Therefore, the bulk architecture of the Qinling Belt is easier to investigate in its eastern part, where the belt is wider. Previous works already dealt with the tectonic evolution of the Qinling belt (e.g., [15,19,27,28,32,40,41,47]), but field-based structural cross-sections are rarely provided. During our field survey, we recognized several litho-tectonic units roughly similar to those identified by previous authors. In this section, they are presented from north to south (Figs. 2 and 3).
2.1 The Lesser Qinling or North China Block
It consists of a sedimentary sequence ranging from Cambrian to Triassic underlain by Neoproterozoic sedimentary rocks and Palaeoproterozoic to Archean gneiss and migmatites. Devonian deposits are lacking in North China, thus the Carboniferous rocks directly overlie Cambrian and Ordovician rocks. This unit corresponds to the NCB.
2.2 The Erlanping magmatic arc
Due to left-lateral wrenching, this unit is widely exposed in the east, but not observed in the west. Andesites, basalts, dolerite, and sedimentary rocks are intruded by diorite, gabbro, and granodiorite plutons. These magmatic rocks characterized by a calc-alkaline geochemical signature [19,41] are interpreted as a magmatic arc formed upon a continental crust. The arc rocks are covered by terrigenous Late Triassic or younger rocks and intruded by Late Palaeozoic plutons [14]. Zircon U–Pb dating of gabbro, tonalite, and trondjemite yields ages ranging between 488 and 470 Ma [19,41]. Curiously, the Erlanping arc is interpreted as the result of a south-dipping subduction without any structural evidence [41].
2.3 The ophiolitic unit
This unit crops out in the western part of the study area (Fig. 2). In some maps [14,33] it is referred to as the ‘Kuanping group’ and considered as the Proterozoic basement of NCB, or it is grouped with the Erlanping arc [12,32]. However, these rocks exhibit quite distinct lithological and metamorphic features from those of the Erlanping arc. Tholeiitic pillow basalts, mafic volcaniclastic rocks, siliceous red pelagic limestones, cherts, and metapelites are the commonest rock types, indicating a deep-sea environment. In the study area, the rocks are highly sheared, but weakly metamorphosed. We place also in the ophiolitic unit some kilometre-scale mafic-ultramafic bodies like those cropping out north of Shangnan and west of Danfeng. Bedded chert yielded Ordovician to Silurian radiolarians [48].
2.4 The Central Qinling migmatite antiform
The next unit, to the south, consists of migmatite developed at the expense of orthogneiss, paragneiss, and amphibolite that may form metre- to plurikilometre-sized restites. Although never clearly recognized as migmatite in early works, melanosome and leucosome segregations, contorted folds, mafic concentrations argue for crustal melting. It is worth noting that the migmatite enclose metre to decametre-sized blocks of amphibolite interpreted as mafic restites. In one site, coesite eclogite is been reported [17,42]. Nevertheless, conversely to Dabieshan, eclogites are rare. Kyanite relics argue for an early metamorphism with P–T conditions estimated at 1 to 0.7 GPa and 600–650 °C, respectively. This early event is followed by a decompression to 0.8 to 0.6 GPa, coeval with a temperature increase to 700–750 °C, and then isobaric cooling [44]. Anatectic granite crops out in the core of the migmatitic unit. The rather steep foliation of the migmatite defines an upright antiformal structure. Zircon U/Pb and whole-rock Rb/Sr ages of the migmatite range from 1 Ga to 380 Ma [32 and enclosed references]. However, since the description of the rock lithology is not always provided in the literature, it is not easy to know what has been exactly dated. Therefore, a new zircon LA ICP-MS dating has been carried out (cf. below).
2.5 The Devonian terrigenous basin
To the south, the Central Qinling migmatitic antiform is bounded by a 5-km-thick series of sandstone, mudstone, conglomerate, and rare limestone, called the Liuling unit [12,32]. This terrigenous unit is palaeontologically dated as Devonian based on brachiopods and corals [14,33]. Sedimentological studies suggest that conglomerate yielding granite, gneiss, gabbro and peridotite pebbles derived from a northern source, likely the migmatitic unit [9,45,47]. It is also worth noting that these Devonian facies are quite different from those that crop out in the South China Block. Conversely to the northern migmatite unit, this one is weakly deformed and metamorphosed. A HT metamorphism, characterized by biotite, garnet or andalousite, observed in most pelitic parts of the series, is well developed. Due to the Danfeng strike-slip fault, the primary relationships between the Devonian terrigenous series and the migmatitic unit are not observed, but it is interpreted as a molassic trough in front of the Qinling Belt [27,45].
2.6 The Douling basement wedge
Immediately south of the Devonian basin, a series of micaschist, gneiss, migmatite, known as the ‘Douling group’, crops out [14,32]. Lithologically, this unit partly resembles the migmatitic unit, although other metamorphic rock types are also present there. For the sake of simplicity, the two units are presented in Fig. 2 with the same pattern. The Douling unit overthrusts the South Neoproterozoic metasedimentary rock, of probably Sinian age. Thus, as shown in map and cross-section (Figs. 2 and 3), the Douling Unit is interpreted as a south-directed basement wedge.
2.7 The Wudangshan dome
The southernmost part of the eastern Qinling Belt consists of a wide area of Neoproterozoic quartzite, sandstone, conglomerate, and pelite intruded by mafic rocks (diabase sills and dyke, basalt, tuff, and microgabbro). This series is overlain by Palaeozoic sedimentary rocks ranging from Cambrian to Permian, and more rarely by Early Triassic sandstones (Fig. 2). However, some of the mafic dykes formerly considered as Proterozoic have been dated as Early Devonian by the U–Pb method on zircon [29]. The northern part of the Wudangshan massif experienced a HP metamorphism well preserved in mafic rocks. Blue amphibole (riebeckite) and phengitic white mica yield lime 40Ar/39Ar ages ranging between 230 and 215 Ma [27] are observed. To the west, a high-temperature metamorphism responsible for the growth of biotite, muscovite, garnet, sillimanite, and andalousite overprints the HP one. This unit, characterized by a pervasive foliation, locally deformed by gentle upright folds, is known as the Wudangshan antiform or dome [27,40]. Its structural evolution will be presented in the forthcoming section.
2.8 The Yangtze foreland
This Proterozoic to Palaeozoic series, belonging to the South China Block (SCB), represents the southern foreland of the Qinling Belt. These sedimentary rocks are folded by east–west, south-verging folds that involve Permian and Early Triassic sandstone.
In the study area, the Jurassic beds that unconformably overlie the older rocks are undeformed. However, according to geological maps, farther south, the Jurassic beds are also folded, attesting to a progressive south-propagating deformation [14]. The Wudangshan metamorphic rocks overthrust to the south the SCB Palaeozoic series, but the present contact is probably not primary, since a brittle thrust places Neoproterozoic rocks upon Triassic and Jurassic ones. When dealing with the pre-Jurassic tectonics, the en-echelon folding of the Yangtze foreland suggests that a left-lateral component of shear took place during or after the thrusting.
The bulk architecture of the above-presented units is shown in Fig. 3. In the northern part of the Qinling Belt that belongs to the North China Block, the deformation is weak. South-verging folds and brittle thrusts involve the Cambrian to Ordovician series. Sometimes an axial planar cleavage develops during the folding, but the associated metamorphism is absent. Locally in the slaty cleavage surfaces, a north–south-trending lineation marked by elongated clasts or quartz fibres can be observed. Low-angle ductile shear zones also indicate a top-to-the-south shearing.
The ophiolitic suture is located south of the Erlanping magmatic arc. South of the suture zone, the Central Qinling migmatitic unit encloses HP amphibolites and eclogites. This unit corresponds to the SCB basement that experienced a post-collisional crustal melting. The palaeontological ages of the Devonian basin comply with the radiometric ones, indicating that the NCB–SCB collision occurred after the arc magmatism that took place at ca 480 Ma [41] and before the deposition of the terrigenous rocks [27,45]. South of the suture, all units exhibit a steeply dipping attitude due to the horizontal shearing related to the sinistral wrenching that deforms the Devonian series. Conversely, in the South Qinling area, the main tectonic and metamorphic events are Triassic in age. A south-directed thrusting, coeval with kilometre-scale structures, is characterized by a rather flat-lying foliation developed during the burial of the SCB Neoproterozoic series below the pre-Devonian Qinling orogen. As discussed below and in agreement with previous authors (e.g., [12,27,32], the East Qinling section shows a polyorogenic evolution. The Erlanping magmatic arc, the ophiolitic suture, the Central Qinling migmatite, and the Devonian molassic basin suggest that the collision occurred in the Early Palaeozoic. However, the Triassic synmetamorphic deformation of the Wudangshan represents an intracontinental tectonic event. Structural analyses and radiometric dates presented in the following sections agree with this preliminary conclusion.
3 Microtectonic analysis and kinematic insights
A detailed microstructural analysis is beyond the scope of this paper. Only the main geometric and kinematic features are given here. Our structural survey allows us to distinguish at least three main tectonic events.
3.1 The early top-to-the-south event
In the central part of the Qinling Belt, the gneissic and migmatitic foliation exhibits variable trends and dips, as it is refolded by a NW–SE-trending antiform (Fig. 2A). The foliation contains a north–south- to NE–SW-trending stretching and mineral lineation (Fig. 2B). When restored to a flat-lying geometry, kinematic criteria such as sigma-type asymmetric porphyroclast systems, or shear bands in augen gneiss, observed in sections perpendicular to the foliation and parallel to the lineation, indicate a top-to-the south sense of shear. In particular, the base of the southern ophiolitic massif, north of Shangnan, consists of more than 10 m of pervasively foliated amphibolite, with a north–south-trending stretching lineation and top-to-the-south kinematic indicators (Fig. 2). It is worth noting that these shear criteria observed in non-migmatitic rocks are older than anatexis. Therefore, this ductile event is interpreted here as the result of the emplacement of the ophiolitic nappe above the Central Qinling basement that corresponds to the basement of the SCB.
3.2 The sinistral wrenching
On the northern side of the Danfeng fault that separates the Central Qinling migmatite from the Devonian terrigenous unit, a vertical foliation pervasively overprints the early one. On the southern side of the fault, a vertical slaty cleavage develops, mainly in the pelitic rocks, but also in coarser grained ones. Both vertical foliations contain a subhorizontal mineral and stretching lineation along which left-lateral shear criteria are observed. The planar and linear fabric elements are associated with the left-lateral wrenching along the Danfeng fault. East–west- to NW–SE-trending upright folds, associated with an axial planar cleavage, are also related to left-lateral wrenching along the Danfeng fault (Fig. 2).
3.3 The Wudangshan doming
More to the south, in the Wudangshan, the main microstructure consists in a widespread bedding-parallel foliation that globally draws an antiformal shape of the Wudang dome. Nevertheless, the regular dome shape is undulated by second-order folds (Fig. 3). The foliation contains a conspicuous north–south- to NNE–SSW-trending mineral and stretching lineation marked by elongated quartz grains and rods, mica clots, or high-temperature slickenlines (Fig. 4C and D). This lineation is associated with contrasted senses of shear (Fig. 4).
Both in the field and in thin section, kinematic indicators are well developed. Top-to-the-south shearing is indicated by asymmetric quartz veins, mica fish, and pressure shadows developed in quartz or feldspar clasts in sandstone. Furthermore, similar kinematic criteria indicate a top-to-the-north shearing. However, this north-directed kinematics is also indicated by extensional shear bands cutting through the foliation and indicating that the top-to-the-north shearing might have developed at the same time, or slightly after, the top-to-the-south shearing.
In the field, it appears almost impossible to distinguish between the two types of lineation recognized in the Wudangshan dome. Nevertheless, the geographic distribution of the top-to-the-south and top-to-the-north kinematics is well delineated (Fig. 2). Top-to-the-south shearing predominates in the southern part of the dome, whereas top-to-the-north shearing is developed in the central and northern parts. A simple explanation of this kinematic pattern can be that top-to-the-south shearing coeval to the formation of HP metamorphism represents the ductile deformation associated with the décollement of the Neoproterozoic series of the SCB from the Proterozoic basement and that the top-to-the-north ductile deformation accommodates the exhumation of the HP rocks. As a whole, the Wudangshan dome can be interpreted as a Triassic metamorphic core complex.
At the scale of the entire study area, the kinematic map derived from the above-described three kinematic events allows us to confirm that top-to-the-south shearing recognized in the Central Qinling unit is not contemporaneous with the ductile shearing recognized in the Wudangshan (Fig. 2). This relative timing is also constrained by radiometric dating.
4 Geochronological constraints
As stated above, the age of the central Qinling migmatite is not well established, since this lithology is not clearly mentioned. Therefore, LA-ICP-MS zircon analyses were performed on a leucosome of migmatite (QL 123), and a migmatized orthogneiss (QL53). The rocks were crushed in a ring mill and sieved (400 μm). Non-magnetic and slightly magnetic heavy minerals were separated from the <400-μm fraction using a plastic gold pan and an iron–boron–rare earth magnet. Large clear crystals were then picked from the heavy mineral separate and mounted in epoxy. All two samples contained large zircon, monazite, and apatite crystals. The samples were then analysed using a Hewlett Packard 4500 quadrupole ICPMS and a New Wave UP 213-nm laser at the University of Monash, Australia. Ablation was performed in a custom designed chamber in a He atmosphere using a laser pulse rate of 5 Hz on a 30-μm-sized beam delivering about 13 mJ cm−2. A total of 11 masses was analysed (Zr, Hf, Nd, Hg, Pb, Th, U), with longer counting time on the Pb and U isotopes. Each analysis began with a 30-s gas blank followed by 30 s with the laser switched on. Mass bias, down-hole fractionation, and instrumental drift were corrected by analysing four crystals of the Temora international zircon standard [2,3] for every 12 unknown zircons. The correction factors were then checked using 91,500 international zircon standards [38] analysed twice for every 12 unknown zircons. Data reduction was performed using the methods outlined by Black et al. [3]. Weighted averages and Concordia plots were calculated using the isoplot software [26].
The zircon analysed from the migmatitic granite of sample QL53 allows us to calculate a mean age at 402 ± 6 Ma (Fig. 5). Zircons from the leucosome migmatite QL 123 are more scattered from the Concordia. The metamict grains with a high U content and Pb loss were not considered for age calculations. Other grains plot on an isochron with a lower intercept at 414 ± 20 Ma and an upper one at 1579 ± 160 Ma (Fig. 6). The latter Proterozoic age is in agreement with a SCB protolith for the orthogneiss. The two Palaeozoic ages at ca 400 and 414 Ma are similar within errors and indicate a Late Silurian to Early Devonian age for the migmatization of the Central Qinling.
These new dating measurements comply with previous Rb/Sr, Sm/Nd mineral isochrones, as well as with 40Ar/39Ar biotite and muscovite plateau ages on amphibolite [12,32,35,49]. According to these radiometric data in the Central Qinling, Ophiolitic Unit and shear zones within the Erlanping arc, the age of the amphibolite facies metamorphism, coeval with the ductile deformation and before crustal melting, can be situated between 420 and 380 Ma, i.e. in the Late Silurian–Early Devonian.
5 A possible geodynamic evolution
Based on the above-presented data, a tentative geodynamic model can be put forward to account for the evolution of the SCB and NCN interactions. A lithosphere-scale evolution along the East Qinling section is pictured in Fig. 7. The Ordovician Erlanping magmatic arc indicates that the NCB–SCB convergence was accommodated by a northward oceanic subduction. The Late Silurian crustal melting argues for a Silurian collision between the two continents. The migmatite with HP and UHP relics partly accommodated the exhumation of the subducted continental crust of the SCB. The Devonian to Permian history is less documented. During the Devonian, terrigenous sediments supplied from the eroding Qinling orogen were deposited in a foreland basin, roughly parallel to the belt. Thus, the Devonian basin can be interpreted as a molassic trough [27,45].
In western Qinling, Triassic ophiolites form the Mianlue suture [20,29]. In eastern Qinling, such an ophiolite is not documented, even if Early Devonian alkaline mafic rocks are identified in the Wudangshan [16]. Nevertheless, intracontinental rifting of the northern and eastern parts of the SCB appears likely. The kilometre-scale strike-slip faults that rework the Qinling Belt might also partly accommodate the Late Palaeozoic rifting of SCB. However, in the present state of knowledge, this process remains undocumented.
In Middle to Late Triassic, north–south convergence resumes, whereas to the south, the SCB platform is still under extension [30,36]. The thinnest and probably hottest part of northern SCB is underthrust below the foreland of the Early Palaeozoic Qinling orogen. The HP metamorphism is associated with this intracontinental subduction. Lastly, the exhumation of the HP rocks accommodated by normal ductile shearing, and coeval with the formation of the Wudangshan dome, appears as a synconvergence process.
6 Conclusion and discussion
From the study of eastern Qinling, it can be argued that the collision between NCB and SCB already took place before the Late Silurian, which is the time of post-collisional crustal melting, associated with the exhumation of the SCB continental crust in the Central Qinling Unit. This conclusion is also supported by the paleontological record, which indicates that similar floras grew in NCB and SCB during Carboniferous and Permian [18,21]. The Triassic intracontinental subduction that accounts for the development of the HP metamorphism in Proterozoic rocks of SCB continues in Late Triassic and Jurassic times, as documented by palaeomagnetism [10,43]. The exhumation of the HP rocks can be seen as a synconvergence process, since top-to-the-north ductile normal faulting and top-to-the-south thrusting are nearly coeval.
To the east of the Qinling belt, in Hong’an, Dabieshan, Zhangbaling and southern Sulu (Fig. 1), such an Early Triassic HP metamorphism is well documented (e.g., [6–8,11,12,24,28,30,36,37]), but in these areas, conversely to what is sometimes proposed [20,25,29], evidence for a Triassic ophiolitic suture, the so-called ‘Mianlue suture’ is completely lacking.
It has also been shown that the Early Triassic intracontinental compression followed by ductile extensional shearing is not restricted to the northern margin of SCB, but involves a significant part of eastern SCB. In Lushan and in Wugongshan (Fig. 1), kyanite develops in Neoproterozoic (Sinian) pelite associated with south-directed ductile shearing [4,22]. In the Jiulingshan, which belongs to the Neoproterozoic Jiangnan Belt [34], the Precambrian structure is partly reworked by pre-Cretaceous compressional and extensional ductile deformations [5,23]. However, in all these areas, there is no evidence for Triassic ophiolites, deep marine rocks, or accretionary prism, conversely to what is sometimes proposed [39].
Lastly, the question of the age of the UHP metamorphism of Qinling–Dabieshan and Sulu areas remains unsolved. Several possibilities can be proposed as working hypotheses: (i) all the UHP rocks formed in Early Palaeozoic and the Triassic ages correspond only to partial resetting due to temperature increase and fluid circulation; (ii) all the UHP rocks formed in Early Triassic; (iii) there are two belts of UHP rocks in Central China, one developed at ca 480–450 Ma and another at 250–230 Ma. This last interpretation is presently preferred by several authors (e.g., [12,13,19,20]) but not convincingly demonstrated yet. Additional structural, petrological and geochronological works are needed in order to solve this problem. Whatever the answer, it is important to emphasize that NCB–SCB collision, in the sense of the initial contact between two continental masses, was already completed in the Early Silurian, at least in the eastern part of the orogen.
Acknowledgements
Claude Lepvrier is deeply acknowledged to give us the chance to express our view, somewhat different from that of many groups working in Central China, and to allow some additional time to prepare this manuscript.
This work has been funded by the national key basis Research program of China (Grant no. 2005CB422101).