Petrology and geochemistry of the Seoul granitic batholith

서울 화강암질 저반의 암석학 및 지구화학

  • Kwon, S.T. (Department of Geology, Yonsei University) ;
  • Cho, D.L. (Department of Geology, Yonsei University) ;
  • Lan, C.Y. (Institute of Earth Sciences, Academia Sinica) ;
  • Shin, K.B. (Department of Geology, Yonsei University) ;
  • Lee, T. (Institute of Earth Sciences, Academia Sinica) ;
  • Mertzman, S.A. (Department of Geosciences, Franklin and Marshall College)
  • 권성택 (연세대학교 지질학과) ;
  • 조등룡 (연세대학교 지질학과) ;
  • 람정영 (대만 학술원 지구과학연구소) ;
  • 신광복 (연세대학교 지질학과) ;
  • 이태풍 (대만 학술원 지구과학연구소) ;
  • 스탠리 머어츠먼
  • Published : 1994.09.01

Abstract

We report field relationship, petrography and major and trace element chemistry for the central part of the Seoul granitic bathlith of Jurassic age occurring in the Kyonggi massif. The batholith consists mainly of biotite granite (BG) and garnet biotite granite (GBG) with minor tonalite-quartz diorite and biotite granodiorite with or without hornblende. The mode data, along with the those reported by Hong (1984) for the biotite granite (south-BG) in the southern part of the batholith, indicate that the many of BGs and majority of GBG and south-BG are leucocratic. Major element data indicate that these predominant rocks of the batholith are peraluminous. Variation trends in Harker diagrams for the major and trace elements suggest that the BG and GBG are not related by a simple crystal fractionation process. The same is true between the central (BG and GBG) and the southern (south-BG) parts of the batholith, suggesting that the central and southern parts of the Seoul batholith may consist of three separate intrusions. Tectonic discriminations using major and trace element data and the age of emplacement suggest that the batholith represents Jurassic plutonism related to an orogeny, perhaps to a subduction-related continental magmatic arc.

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