East Asia orogenesis restricted oceanic circulation between Paleo-Tethys
and Panthalassa before the Permian mass extinction
Abstract
The Paleo-Tethys and Panthalassa are two major oceans that witnessed the
end-Permian mass extinction, and they have been suggested to have
distinct compositions, with the Paleo-Tethys Ocean euxinic, and the much
larger Panthalassa Ocean being largely ventilated. Distinctions of these
two once-connected oceans imply that interactions between them must have
been restricted shortly before the end-Permian extinction. However,
detailed geological processes for the disconnection between them along
the eastern Paleo-Tethys Ocean due to the collision of North and South
China, are still unclear. Previous geochronological studies on eclogite
facies rocks in the Dabie–Sulu orogenic belt, which are the metamorphic
products of the collision between North and South China, have yielded
mainly Triassic metamorphic ages. Nonetheless, new Permian metamorphic
ages are identified from southeastern North China, northern Dabie, and
the Permo–Triassic intracontinental orogen of South China, which may
collectively closely associate this major tectonic event with the
end-Permian extinction. New age dating results, as well as a synthesis
of recent studies on metamorphic rocks, show that the onset of the
collisional orogenesis dates back to the Middle Permian (270–252 Ma).
We thereby provide a new tectonic model for the major continents of East
Asia, in which the initial collision between North and South China
during the Middle Permian critically isolated the Paleo-Tethys Ocean
from the Panthalassa Ocean, facilitating the oceanographic transition of
the once fossiliferous Paleo-Tethys from a life-giving nutrient-rich
ocean into a euxinic death trap, thereby serving as prelude to the
end-Permian extinction.