The ductile shear zones within the North Wuyishan domain are key to understand the tectonic evolution of the South China Block (SCB). This study integrates a multifaceted approach, including field observations, thin section analysis, quartz electron backscatter diffraction (EBSD), zircon U-Pb dating, and mica Ar-40/Ar-39 dating, to elucidate the deformation history of these shear zones in North Wuyishan. The research identifies a two-stage deformation process of early Paleozoic. The initial D1 phase is marked by a top-to-SW thrusting shear, with associated felsic veins dated to the Ordovician period (447 +/- 10 Ma to 459 +/- 4 Ma), correlating with high-grade metamorphism and partial melting. The later D2 phase is characterized by NE-striking foliation and lineation, indicative of sinistral strike-slip shear, dated to the early Devonian (412 Ma) and early Carboniferous (similar to 354 Ma). The D1 phase suggests early crustal thickening and melting within the Cathaysia block, while D2 indicates a transpressional regime during post-orogenic adjustment. The geological features of the SCB, notably the absence of arc magmatism, ophiolitic m & eacute;lange, and high-pressure metamorphism, comply with an intracontinental rift closure model as previously proposed. This model supports the hypothesis that the Early Paleozoic intracontinental orogeny in the SCB was likely a far-field consequence of a continental collision between the SCB-North Vietnam and South Vietnam blocks near the east Gondwana supercontinent.