Arc-continent collision of the Coastal Range in Taiwan: Geochronological constraints from U-Pb ages of zircons
Abstract
The oblique arc-continent collision between the Luzon arc and the southeastern margin of the Eurasian continent caused the uplift of Taiwan. The Coastal Range in eastern Taiwan is the northern section of the Luzon arc in the collision zone and thus records important information about the arc-continent collision. In this paper, we determine and analyze the U-Pb ages of magmatic zircons from the volcanic arc and clastic zircons from the fore-arc basin in the Coastal Range. For the volcanic arc in the Coastal Range, the eruption ages range from 16.8-5 Ma. Given that the initial subduction of the South China Sea oceanic crust (17 Ma) occurred before the Luzon arc formed, we conclude that the volcanic activity of the Coastal Range began at 16.8 ± 1.3 Ma; it was most active from 14 to 8 Ma and continued until approximately 5 Ma. The U-Pb chronology also indicates that the initial stage of arc-continent collision of the Coastal Range started at approximately 5 Ma, when the northern section of the Luzon arc moved away from the magmatic chamber because of the kinematics of the Philippine Sea Plate.
- Publication:
-
Journal of Marine Systems
- Pub Date:
- April 2018
- DOI:
- 10.1016/j.jmarsys.2016.11.014
- Bibcode:
- 2018JMS...180..182G
- Keywords:
-
- Taiwan;
- Volcanic island arc;
- Tuluanshan Formation;
- Fanshuliao Formation;
- U-Pb geochronology;
- Arc-continent collision