Abstract

The Miyun Geopark is located in the northern part of the North China Craton and includes a variety of Archean granitoids and metamorphic rocks. SHRIMP zircon dating documents their emplacement ages at 2567–2508Ma, metamorphic events at ca. 2.50Ga, 2.44Ga, and 1.82Ga. Late Neoarchean basement rocks elsewhere in the North China Craton document a similar evolutionary history with intrusion of granitoid rocks commencing at ca. 2590Ma and reaching three peaks at about 2550, 2520, and 2500Ma; these rocks then underwent regional metamorphisms at ca. 2.50Ga, 2.44Ga, 1.92Ga, and 1.82Ga. Positive εHf(t) values of +1.7 to +7.6, with model ages younger than 3.0Ga, for magmatic zircons from these late Neoarchean intrusive rocks indicate that they are predominantly derived from juvenile crustal sources and suggest that significant crustal growth occurred in the northern North China Craton during the Neoarchean. The intrusive rocks in the Miyun area are part of an extensive province of late Neoarchean magmatism and appear to be related to mantle plume activity at this time.

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