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Late Ordovician volcanism in Korea constrains the timing for breakup of Sino-Korean Craton from Gondwana
Institution:1. Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences, Korea University, Seoul 136-713, Republic of Korea;2. Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences, Andong National University, Andong 760-749, Republic of Korea;1. Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences and The Earth and Environmental Science System Research Center, Chonbuk National University, 567 Bekjede-ro, Jeonju Chonbuk 561–756, Republic of Korea;2. Resources Management Division, Korindo Group, Jakarta 12780, Indonesia;3. Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences, Korea University, Seoul 136–701, Republic of Korea;4. Division of Oversea and New Business, Korea Coal Corporation, Wonju 220–170, Republic of Korea;5. Division of Earth and Environmental Sciences, Korea Basic Science Institute, Cheongju 363–883, Republic of Korea
Abstract:In the early Paleozoic the Sino-Korean Craton (SKC) and South China Craton (SCC) were situated along the margin of east Gondwana. The SKC was connected to core Gondwana by an epeiric sea which was the site for deposition of lower Paleozoic sequences of SKC. The SKC and SCC may have drifted away from core Gondwana sometime during the mid-Paleozoic and would have been outboard microcontinents in the late Paleozoic, until they collided to form the East Asian continent in the Triassic. The breakup of SCC from Gondwana was suggested to have taken place at ∼380 Ma, while no reliable suggestions have hitherto been made for breakup of SKC from Gondwana. This study presents a convincing evidence for breakup of SKC from Gondwana, based on the recognition of Late Ordovician volcanism in Korea. New SHRIMP U–Pb zircon ages, 445.0 ± 3.7 Ma and 452.5 ± 3.2 Ma, are obtained from trachytic rocks of the Ongnyeobong Formation of Taebaeksan Basin in Korea which occupied the marginal part of the SKC in the early Paleozoic. This Late Ordovician volcanism along with previous records of Ordovician volcanic activities along the western margin of the SKC is interpreted indicating the development of an incipient oceanic ridge. The oceanic ridge uplifted the SKC including the epeiric sea, which subsequently resulted in terminating the early Paleozoic sedimentation of the epeiric sea. The paucity of lower Paleozoic volcanic rocks across much of the SKC however suggests that the oceanic ridge did not extend into the epeiric sea. Instead, spreading of oceanic ridge entailed dextral movement of associated transform faults, which may have played a major role in breakup of SKC from mainland Gondwana by the end of Ordovician.
Keywords:Tectonics  Paleogeography  Sino-Korean Craton  Gondwana  Ordovician  Geochronology
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