craton granulite tectonic setting thermal evolution Triassic uranium series dating
Issue Date:
2001
Publisher:
Journal of Asian Earth Sciences
Citation:
Volume 19, Issue 2-Jan, Page 77-84
Abstract:
The Kontum massif in Central Vietnam represents the largest continuous exposure of crystalline
basement of the Indochina craton. The central Kontum massif is chiefly made of orthopyroxene granulites
(enderbite, charnockite) and associated rocks of the Kannack complex. Mineral assemblages and
geothermobarometric studies have shown that the Kannack complex has severely metamorphosed under
granulite facies corresponding to P-T conditions of 800-850?C and 8 ? 1 kbars. Twenty-three SHRIMP II UPb
analyses of eighteen zircon grains separated from a granulite sample of the Kannack complex yield ca
254 Ma, and one analysis gives ca 1400 Ma concordant age for a zoned zircon core. This result shows that
granulites of the Kannack complex in the Kontum massif have formed from a high-grade granulite facies
tectonothermal event of Indosinian age (Triassic). The cooling history and subsequent exhumation of the
Kannack complex during Indosinian times ranged from ~850?C at ca 254 Ma to ~300?C at 242 Ma, with an
average cooling rate of ~45?C/Ma. (C) 2000 Elsevier Science Ltd. All rights reserved.