Proterozoic tectonics of Hainan Island in supercontinent cycles: New insights from geochronological and isotopic results

2017 
Abstract Hainan Island in southwestern south China has 1.43 Ga crystalline rocks as part of the Proterozoic basement rocks for the Cathaysia Block. Understanding Proterozoic tectonics of the island is thus essential for constraining the paleogeographic positions of the Cathaysia Block in Precambrian supercontinents. We report here new geochronological and Hf–O isotopic results for Mesoproterozoic gneisses, metavolcanic and metasedimentary rocks, and quartz sandstones from Hainan Island. Together with published data from the region, we divide Hainan Mesoproterozoic rocks into three major tectonostratigraphic units: (1) the amphibolite-facies Baoban Complex, consisting mainly of 1.43 Ga volcanic/plutonic rocks and sedimentary rocks formed in a continental rift setting but subsequently experienced high-grade metamorphism during 1.3–1.0 Ga; (2) the greenschist-facies Shilu Group, consisting of 1.43 Ga rift sediments with 1.44 Ga tuff in the “fifth layer” that are coeval with the protolith of the Baoban Complex, and ca. 1.0 Ga foreland basin sediments in the “sixth layer”, all underwent upper greenschist-facies metamorphism soon after the deposition of the “sixth layer”; (3) the Shihuiding Formation that unconformably overlies the Shilu Group, consisting of
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