Abstract

As a part of the Columbia supercontinent, the North China craton is an ideal object for studying the evolution of supercontinent assembly and the mechanism of orogenesis in the Paleoproterozoic. The Jiao-Liao-Ji belt, located in the eastern part of the North China craton, provides important clues for our understanding of Paleoproterozoic orogenic processes. A series of Paleoproterozoic granitic gneiss domes is preserved in the Liaodong segment of the Jiao-Liao-Ji belt. These domes are cored by the Liaoji granitic gneisses (emplaced at 2250−2150 Ma) and mantled by metamorphosed volcanic-sedimentary rocks (deposited at 2200−1940 Ma). Combining multiple lines of evidence from mesostructures and microstructures, kinematics, magnetic fabrics, and crystallographic fabrics, we suggest that the granitic gneiss domes reflect inhomogeneous shearing of the middle to lower crust during Paleoproterozoic orogenic processes. Intensive layer-paralleling shearing characterized subhorizontal flow during nearly E-W−oriented compression. As a hot orogen formed in the Paleoproterozoic, the orogenic deformation in the Jiao-Liao-Ji belt was characterized by extensive doming due to dominant subhorizontal flow and subsidiary vertical flow in the middle to lower crust.

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