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Featured researches published by Wenzhu Hou.


Tectonics | 2015

Paleozoic accretionary orogenesis in the Paleo‐Asian Ocean: Insights from detrital zircons from Silurian to Carboniferous strata at the northwestern margin of the Tarim Craton

Guochun Zhao; Min Sun; Paul R. Eizenhöfer; Wenzhu Hou; Xiaoran Zhang; Dongxing Liu; Bo Wang; Guowei Zhang

A detrital zircon U-Pb and Lu-Hf isotopic study was carried out in the Middle Silurian to Late Carboniferous sedimentary strata of the northwestern Tarim Craton in order to understand accretionary processes in the southern part of the Central Asian Orogenic Belt. Detrital zircons from these strata yielded U-Pb ages clustering around 2.8–2.3 Ga, 2.0–1.7 Ga, 1.3–0.9 Ga, 880–600 Ma, and 500–400 Ma, with age populations and Hf isotopic signatures matching those of magmatic rocks in the Tarim Craton and the Central Tianshan Block. Abundant 500–400 Ma detrital zircons most likely reflect deposition in a retroarc foreland basin inboard of an Andean-type magmatic arc to the north, supporting the northern Tarim-Central Tianshan connection during early Paleozoic time. The absence of 380–310 Ma zircon population in the Carboniferous siliciclastic rocks suggests that the Central Tianshan Block may have been separated from the Tarim Craton in the Early Devonian, caused by the interarc/back-arc opening of the South Tianshan Ocean. We propose an accretionary orogenic model switching from advancing to retreating mode during Paleozoic time in the southwestern part of the Paleo-Asian Ocean. This transition most likely occurred coevally with the rifting of Southeast Asian blocks from the northeastern margin of Gondwana.


Geological Society of America Bulletin | 2015

Geochronological and Hf isotopic variability of detrital zircons in Paleozoic strata across the accretionary collision zone between the North China craton and Mongolian arcs and tectonic implications

Paul R. Eizenhöfer; Guochun Zhao; Min Sun; Jian Zhang; Wenzhu Hou

The Central Asian orogenic belt formed by accretion subsequent to the contraction of the paleo–Asian Ocean, and its southeastern segment terminated along the Solonker suture zone, amalgamating the Mongolian arcs and the North China craton by the end of the Early Triassic. Since typical regional collisional features are absent, its tectonic evolution remains speculative. An investigation into the variability of detrital zircon U-Pb ages and Hf ratios in Permian strata along a southeast-northwest transect from the Mongolian arcs to the North China craton reveals distinct differences: Northern basins carry a broad Mesoproterozoic to latest Precambrian age signature, and their sedimentary source terranes are of mixed juvenile to crustal magmatic origin. In contrast, southern basins contain detritus from the North China craton, and their sources are of dominantly crustal contaminated magmatic origin. Provenance analysis suggests that in the early Paleozoic (ca. 429 Ma), the paleo–Asian Ocean was consumed along the Uliastai arc and the North China craton, initiating the formation of the northern and southern accretionary orogens, respectively. By the end of the middle Carboniferous, the Mongolian arcs were consolidated after the accretion of the Uliastai arc. In the late Carboniferous (ca. 314 Ma), the Hegenshan back-arc basin opened, detaching the northern accretionary orogen. While subduction continued there, it may have temporarily ceased in the south after the accretion of a microcontinent (ca. 300 Ma). By the end of the Middle Permian (ca. 269 Ma), back-arc basin closure led to the formation and obduction of the suprasubduction zone Hegenshan ophiolite. Eventually, the paleo–Asian Ocean closed by double-sided subduction. Such accretionary wedge-wedge collision would not involve continental deep subduction, unlike other continental collisions. The early stages of the sequence likely resembled a Pacific-type scenario dominated by the subduction of oceanic lithosphere, including a Japanese Sea–type back-arc basin opening. The late stages involved the accretion of large-scale continental blocks, ultimately leading to final ocean closure, which may be similar to the archipelago-type setting of present-day Southeast Asia.


Geology | 2016

Tarim and North China cratons linked to northern Gondwana through switching accretionary tectonics and collisional orogenesis

Guochun Zhao; Peter A. Cawood; Min Sun; Paul R. Eizenhöfer; Wenzhu Hou; Xiaoran Zhang; Qian Liu

Accretionary and collisional orogenesis in the Tarim and North China cratons during Paleozoic time can be correlated with events associated with the assembly and subsequent incipient dispersal of Gondwana. Zircon U-Pb and Hf isotopic data from the northern margins of the two cratons and neighbors have revealed comparable eHf(t)-time patterns. Zircons with magmatic ages of 500–400 Ma display a large spread and decreasing eHf(t) values with time, whereas 400–310 Ma zircons have dominantly positive eHf(t) values and an overall increasing trend. The marked shift of the zircon Hf array at ca. 400 Ma was most likely related to a major tectonic switch from advancing to retreating accretionary orogenesis, corresponding to the development of regional extension. The commencement of subduction at 500 Ma and establishment of an advancing accretionary orogen along the preexisting passive margin was synchronous with early Paleozoic continental collisional events along the southern margins of the two cratons. The temporal agreement of these events, and their accordance with collision and/or accretion events during Gondwana assembly, suggest that the Tarim and North China cratons likely collided with the northern Australia margin of East Gondwana at ca. 500 Ma. They subsequently dispersed from Gondwana in the Early Devonian, coinciding with switching accretionary tectonics along the northern margins of the two cratons that were possibly induced by the slab rollback of the subducting paleo–Asian Ocean plate.


Geological Society of America Bulletin | 2016

Tectonic evolution from subduction to arc-continent collision of the Junggar ocean: Constraints from U-Pb dating and Hf isotopes of detrital zircons from the North Tianshan belt, NW China

Xiaoran Zhang; Guochun Zhao; Min Sun; Paul R. Eizenhöfer; Wenzhu Hou; Dongxing Liu; Bo Wang; Qian Liu; Bing Xu

The Junggar ocean, once situated north (present coordinate) of the Yili and Central Tianshan blocks during early Paleozoic to late Carboniferous time, was a major southern branch of the Paleo–Asian Ocean, the opening, expansion, and final closure of which led to the development of the Central Asian Orogenic Belt between Eastern Europe–Siberia and Tarim–North China. However, the detailed evolution of the Junggar ocean has not been well constrained. This paper reports U-Pb and Lu-Hf isotopic data of detrital zircons from sandstones in the North Tianshan belt, which can provide new insights into understanding the Paleozoic development of the Junggar ocean. Most detrital zircons exhibit oscillatory zoning and high Th/U ratios, typical of igneous origin. The predominant Paleozoic zircons yield major age populations at ca. 294, 313–327, 338–375, 440–455, and 474–502 Ma and are interpreted to have been derived from the long-lived volcanic- and island-arc systems formed by the southward subduction of the Junggar ocean and subsequent collisional and postcollisional magmatism. The minor Precambrian zircons yield ages scattering at ca. 550, 680–765, 890, 970–990, 1160–1250, 1500, 1690–1750, 1840–1970, 2440–2500, and 2615–2700 Ma, which are nearly, but not fully, congruent with those from the adjacent Beishan and Kuluketage Precambrian terranes. Therefore, our results indicate that the Central Tianshan block was once part of the Tarim block during Precambrian time. Most of the 541–440 Ma zircons possess low negative eHf(t) values, while the <440–300 Ma zircons exhibit dominantly positive eHf(t) values, which can be linked to the Junggar oceanic slab rollback since ca. 440 Ma. This event, subsequently, gave rise to the opening of the South Tianshan back-arc basin/ocean between the Central Tianshan and Tarim blocks, exhumation of high-pressure granulites, and formation of a series of island arcs in the Junggar ocean. Combined with previous studies, we suggest that the Junggar ocean was probably closed at ca. 300 Ma in association with arc-continent collision, followed by postcollisional magmatism. It deserves mentioning that the ca. 0.5 and 1.4–1.5 Ga (detrital) zircons and contemporaneous magmatic rocks only occur in the Central Tianshan block, not in the Tarim block. Therefore, more detailed investigations are needed to better elucidate the origin and Precambrian evolution of the Central Tianshan block.


Geological Society of America Bulletin | 2016

Late Ordovician adakitic rocks in the Central Tianshan block, NW China: Partial melting of lower continental arc crust during back-arc basin opening

Xiaoran Zhang; Guochun Zhao; Paul R. Eizenhöfer; Min Sun; Wenzhu Hou; Dongxing Liu; Bo Wang; Qian Liu; Bing Xu

Late Ordovician (ca. 451 Ma) calc-alkaline adakitic granodiorite and granite, associated with coeval S-type granites, were discovered in the Central Tianshan block, NW China. They are characterized by high Sr (526−620 ppm), but low Y (6.8−8.6 ppm) and heavy rare earth element (HREE) contents (e.g., Yb = 0.7−0.8 ppm), and thus have high Sr/Y (66−86) ratios. The granodiorite has SiO 2 of 69.3 wt%, MgO of 1.4 wt%, and Mg# of 48, exhibiting light (L) REE−enriched patterns ([La/Yb] N = 15.82, [Dy/Yb] N = 1.25) with strong positive Eu (δEu = 1.65) but weak negative Nb, Ta, and Ti anomalies. Its low Cr (9.0 ppm) and Ni (6.2 ppm) concentrations, low negative e Hf ( t ) and e Nd ( t ) values (−11.3 to −5.0 and −4.8, respectively), old one-stage Nd model age (ca. 1.4 Ga), and high initial 87 Sr/ 86 Sr ratio (0.7129) are characteristics of derivation from the partial melting of thickened ancient lower crust, most likely in the eclogite facies. The adakitic granite samples contain slightly higher SiO 2 (72.4−73.0 wt%), but lower MgO (0.6−0.7 wt%) and Mg# (37−40), with low Cr (7.9−12.1 ppm) and Ni (5.6−7.4 ppm), displaying concave-upward REE patterns ([La/Yb] N = 19.25−30.01, [Dy/Yb] N = 0.85−1.01) with negligible Eu (δEu = 0.87−1.03) and pronounced negative Nb, Ta, and Ti anomalies. Their positive e Hf ( t ) (+4.3 to +7.1) and e Nd ( t ) (+1.6 to +3.2) values, young one-stage Nd model ages (0.9−0.8 Ga), and low initial 87 Sr/ 86 Sr ratios (0.7055−0.7060) indicate generation by the partial melting of relatively juvenile lower crust, probably in the garnet-bearing amphibolite facies. Combined with previous investigations, we suggest that the Central Tianshan developed as a continental arc along northern Tarim, facing the southward subduction of the Junggar Ocean during Ordovician time. Lower-crustal melting was likely induced by asthenosphere upwelling in response to rollback of the Junggar oceanic slab, accompanied by crustal extension and incipient opening of the South Tianshan back-arc basin along northern Tarim and separation of the Central Tianshan as a microcontinent. The heat brought by the ascending adakitic magmas possibly caused anatexis of the basement rocks, forming the coeval pelite-derived S-type granites. The eastern segment of the South Tianshan Ocean was most probably closed prior to ca. 380 Ma. This study provides ample evidence that adakitic rocks can be produced by partial melting of (thickened) lower crust during incipient opening of a back-arc basin.


Lithosphere | 2017

Geochronology and geochemistry of Permian to Early Triassic granitoids in the Alxa Terrane: Constraints on the final closure of the Paleo-Asian Ocean

Qian Liu; Guochun Zhao; Paul R. Eizenhöfer; Yanlin Zhu; Wenzhu Hou; Xiaoran Zhang; Bo Wang

As a pivotal junction between the North China and Tarim cratons, the Alxa Terrane provides an ideal window to constrain the final closure of the middle segment of the Paleo-Asian Ocean (PAO). This study carried out petrological, whole-rock geochemical, and zircon U-Pb-Hf isotopic investigations on four major granitic plutonic complexes in the Alxa Terrane. The Bayan Nuru and Yabulai plutonic complexes are I-type granitoids that yield crystallization ages of 281–268 Ma and 277–270 Ma, respectively, with negative zircon e Hf (t) values (-11.5 to -3.2), primarily sourced from the Neoproterozoic rocks in the region. The Nuergai granitoids yield crystallization ages of 281–268 Ma and show I-type affinities and positive zircon e Hf (t) values (+1.6 to +6.4), indicating an origin related to magma mixing. Emplaced at ca. 241 Ma, the Oliji granitoids display varying zircon e Hf (t) values from -0.9 to +11.5, which necessitate a predominant source of mantle-derived materials. A compilation of zircon e Hf (t) and whole-rock e Nd (t) values of the magmatic rocks in the Alxa Terrane illustrates a decreasing trend from the Late Carboniferous to the Early Permian and an increasing trend during Middle Permian to Triassic time. The marked shift with a large variation of zircon e Hf (t) and whole-rock e Nd (t) values at 280–265 Ma indicates a tectonic switch from subduction to post-collision tectonic regimes in the Alxa Terrane, marking the final closure of the middle segment of the PAO. Comparable isotope variations are also identified from 260 to 245 Ma magmatic counterparts on the northern margin of the North China Craton, hence suggesting a progressively eastward closure of the PAO.


The Journal of Geology | 2017

Varying contents of sources affect tectonic-setting discrimination of sediments: a case study from permian sandstones in the eastern Tianshan, Northwestern China

Xiaoran Zhang; Guochun Zhao; Paul R. Eizenhöfer; Min Sun; Wenzhu Hou; Dongxing Liu; Bo Wang; Qian Liu; Bing Xu

This article reports new geochemical data from Permian sandstones, most probably deposited during a period of postcollisional extension, from the Yamansu, Shaquanzi, and Xingxingxia areas in the Eastern Tianshan, northwestern China, to determine and characterize their provenance and source nature. The medium- to coarse-grained sandstones are composed mainly of angular to subangular quartz and volcanic fragments, with minor plagioclase and/or microcline, suggesting proximal deposition. Although the samples show relatively large variations in SiO2 (59.7–70.8 wt%), Al2O3 (9.0–14.9 wt%), and Fe2O3T + MgO (2.3–5.2 wt%) contents, they yield low chemical index of alteration values (41–55) but high index of compositional variability values (1.06–1.78), suggestive of their derivation mainly from compositionally immature sources with weak chemical weathering. Their relatively low Zr concentrations (99–225 ppm) and GdN/YbN ratios (1.20–1.53) manifest insignificant zircon and monazite enrichments. Most of the samples are characterized by upper continental crust–like rare earth element (REE) patterns with δEu values of 0.63–0.99, reflecting dominant contributions from intermediate to felsic rocks. In particular, the Xingxingxia and Shaquanzi samples have relatively low SiO2/Al2O3 (4.51–5.82) and Th/U (2.67–3.77) ratios but high ∑REE (total REE) contents (71.8–141.1 ppm), indicative of a low degree of sedimentary sorting/recycling, whereas the Yamansu samples have higher SiO2/Al2O3 (6.30–6.57) and Th/U (3.93–5.16) ratios but low ∑REE contents (77.1–86.8 ppm), probably indicative of a higher degree of sedimentary recycling or more involvement of recycled materials. Tectonic-setting discrimination using geochemical data from the samples yielded inconsistent results, with the Xingxingxia and Shaquanzi samples dominantly plotted in or adjacent to the active continental margin or continental island arc field, while the Yamansu samples mostly plotted in or adjacent to the passive margin field. Combining our findings with those of previous detrital zircon studies, we suggest that the inconsistent tectonic discriminations of the Permian sandstones most likely resulted from their receiving different proportions of source rocks that have distinct geochemical compositions. This study provides ample evidence that the geochemical compositions of sedimentary rocks within a continuous sequence or in the same depositional tectonic setting can vary significantly as a result of changes in contents of different source materials and thus that the use of tectonic-setting discrimination diagrams requires great caution.


Lithos | 2015

Geochemical characteristics of the Permian basins and their provenances across the Solonker Suture Zone: Assessment of net crustal growth during the closure of the Palaeo-Asian Ocean

Paul R. Eizenhöfer; Guochun Zhao; Jian Zhang; Wenzhu Hou; Dongxing Liu; Bo Wang


Lithos | 2016

Late Paleozoic subduction and collision processes during the amalgamation of the Central Asian Orogenic Belt along the South Tianshan suture zone

Guochun Zhao; Min Sun; Paul R. Eizenhöfer; Wenzhu Hou; Xiaoran Zhang; Qian Liu; Bo Wang; Dongxing Liu; Bing Xu


Lithos | 2015

Geochronology and geochemistry of the Yilan blueschists in the Heilongjiang Complex, northeastern China and tectonic implications

Chloe Yanlin Zhu; Guochun Zhao; Min Sun; Qian Liu; Wenzhu Hou; Xiaoran Zhang; Paul R. Eizenhöfer

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Guochun Zhao

University of Hong Kong

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Min Sun

University of Hong Kong

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Qian Liu

University of Hong Kong

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Yanlin Zhu

University of Hong Kong

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Bo Wang

Northwest University (United States)

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G Zhao

University of Hong Kong

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Jian Zhang

The Chinese University of Hong Kong

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