Mesozoic metallogeny in East China and corresponding geodynamic settings - An introduction to the special issue
Abstract
The giant East China Mesozoic metallogenic province hosts some of the World's largest resources of tungsten, tin, molybdenum, antimony and bismuth. Ores of gold, silver, mercury, lead, zinc, copper, uranium and iron are also of major importance. The province and its constituent metallogenic belts or regions (South China; Middle-Lower Yangtze River Valley; East Qinling-Dabie; Interior of North China Craton; Yan-Liao and North-east China) are the products of several pulses of igneous activity and mineralisation between ~240 and ~80 Ma. Each successive stage has produced a distinctive suite of deposits that can be readily related to the geodynamic evolution of the region during the Mesozoic. This geodynamic evolution is linked to a complex series of tectonic events, involving far-field-subduction, plate collisions, crustal thickening, post-collision collapse and rifting.
- Publication:
-
Ore Geology Reviews
- Pub Date:
- 2011
- DOI:
- Bibcode:
- 2011OGRv...43....1M