A CHINESE CONUNDRUM — CAN A TRIASSIC METAMORPHIC CORE COMPLEX IN NORTHERN CHINA BE BETTER EXPLAINED BY MID- PALEOZOIC THRUST FAULTING?: A NEW INTERPRETATION FOR THE WESTERN HILLS "METAMORPHIC CORE COMPLEX" OF BEIJING
What is missing in this "mcc" is a master detachment fault that overlies a lower plate of the proposed complex. A second complication is that the metamorphic grade of pre-Carboniferous units is much higher than that of Carboniferous rocks (coal, slate, phyllite, metasandstone and metaconglomerate). Lower Paleozoic and Proterozoic calc-mylonites and other ductilely deformed lithologies include kyanite- and garnet-staurolite- chloritoid-bearing rocks in the Neoproterozoic Qingbaikou Fm; PT conditions for the kyanite-bearing rocks are reported as >5.5 kbar and 450-550° C (Wang and Chen, 1996). This thermobarometry is incompatible with a Qingbaikou depth of burial beneath the overlying Cambrian through Triassic section of ≤4-5 km. It is suggested here that the Cambro-Ordovician and Proterozoic section lay within a ductile shear zone beneath a thick cover of Archean basement and cover nappes. An apparent thrust belt remnant, an allochthonous slice(s) of Qingbaikou through Ordovician units, lies below Late Paleozoic strata west of Nanjiao. Following nappe erosion, Carboniferous to Triassic strata were deposited, and then metamorphosed and deformed in response to terrane amalgamation along the northern margin of the North China craton. If this controversial hypothesis for late Early or mid-Paleozoic basement-involved thrust faulting within the North China craton is correct, it may be the first deformation of this age to be recognized. Ordovician-Silurian oceanic subduction has been documented along north and south margins of the North China craton.