4.6 Article

Formation of Cretaceous Cordilleran and post-orogenic granites and their microgranular enclaves from the Dalat zone, southern Vietnam: Tectonic implications for the evolution of Southeast Asia

Journal

LITHOS
Volume 182, Issue -, Pages 229-241

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.lithos.2013.09.016

Keywords

I-type granites; Within-plate granites; Cretaceous; Southeast Asia; South Vietnam

Funding

  1. Academia Sinica and National Science Council of the Republic of China [NSC100-2116-M-003-006, NSC 93-2116-M-001-015]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Cordilleran-type batholiths are useful in understanding the duration, cyclicity and tectonic evolution of continental margins. The Dalat zone of southern Vietnam preserves evidence of Late Mesozoic convergent zone magmatism superimposed on Precambrian rocks of the Indochina Block. The Dinhquan, Deoca and Ankroet plutons and their enclaves indicate that the Dalat zone transitioned from an active continental margin producing Cordilleran-type batholiths to highly extended crust producing within-plate plutons. The Deoca and Dinhquan plutons are compositionally similar to Cordilleran I-type granitic rocks and yield mean zircon U/Pb ages between 118 +/- 1.4 Ma and 115 +/- 1.2 Ma. Their Sr-Nd whole rock isotopes (I-sr = 0.7044 to 0.7062; epsilon Nd-(T) = -2.4 to +0.2) and zircon Hf isotopes (epsilon Hf-(T) = +82 +/- 12 and +6.4 +/- 0.9) indicate that they were derived by mixing between a mantle component and an enriched component (i.e. GLOSS). The Ankroet pluton is chemically similar to post-orogenic/within-plate granitic rocks and has a zircon U/Pb age of 87 +/- 1.6 Ma. Geobarometric calculations indicate that amphibole within the Ankroet pluton crystallized at a depth of similar to 6 kbar which is consistent with the somewhat more depleted Sr-Nd isotope (I-sr = 0.7017 to 0.7111; epsilon Nd-(T) = 2.8 to +0.6) and variable epsilon Hf-(T) compositions suggesting a stronger influence of crustal material in the parental magma. The compositional change of the Dalat zone granitic rocks during the middle to late Cretaceous indicates that the tectonic regime evolved from a continental arc environment to one of post-orogenic extension. The appearance of sporadic post-90 Ma magmatism in the Dalat zone and along the eastern margin of Eurasian indicates that there was no subsequent orogenic event and the region was likely one of highly extended crust that facilitated the opening of the South China Sea during the latter half of the Cenozoic. (C) 2013 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available