- 著者
-
Kazuhiro Suzuki
Mamoru Adachi
- 出版者
- GEOCHEMICAL SOCIETY OF JAPAN
- 雑誌
- GEOCHEMICAL JOURNAL (ISSN:00167002)
- 巻号頁・発行日
- vol.25, no.5, pp.357-376, 1991 (Released:2008-04-08)
- 参考文献数
- 42
- 被引用文献数
-
145
260
Precise electron microprobe analysis makes it possible to determine the Th, U and Pb concentrations in an area less than 5 μm across in a single grain of monazite, zircon or xenotime; the detection limit of PbO at 2σ confidence level is 0.005–0.008 wt.% and the relative error is 3% for 0.2 wt.% concentration level. The subgrain analyses of monazite are plotted on the coordinates of PbO and ThO2* (ThO2 plus the equivalent of UO2), and those of zircon and xenotime on the coordinates of PbO and UO2* (UO2 plus the equivalent of ThO2). Data points are arrayed linearly and enable us to define an isochron which passes through the origin. The chemical Th-U-total Pb isochron ages coincide well with mineral and whole-rock ages isotopically determined for the same samples. The chemical Th-U-total Pb isochron method was applied to the age determination of monazite, zircon and xenotime from the Tsubonosawa paragneiss and the host Hikami granite in the South Kitakami terrane of Northeast Japan. The chemical ages show that (1) the sedimentation of the gneiss-protolith occurred soon after the emplacement of 500 Ma granitoids in the source region, where the 500 Ma granitoids were widespread together with Precambrian rocks possibly dated back to as old as Archean (3080 ± 180 Ma), (2) the gneiss-protolith was metamorphosed to the amphibolite facies grade about 430 ± 10 Ma ago, and (3) the gneiss was affected by multiple thermal events of 350, 260, 180 and 100 Ma. The 350 Ma event corresponds to the intrusion of the Hikami granite, and the 100 Ma one to the intrusion of the Cretaceous Kesengawa granite. The 260 and 180 Ma events may correspond in age to the main metamorphic event and subsequent igneous activity in the Hida terrane, central Japan. The chemical Th-U-total Pb isochron age in terms of the precise microprobe analysis of low-level Th, U and Pb will open a new vista on the Paleozoic-Mesozoic tectonics of the Japanese Islands.