Abstract

The North China Craton (NCC), dominated by ∼2.6–2.5Ga tectonothermal events, provides a natural laboratory to study Neoarchean crustal growth and geodynamic evolution. Late Neoarchean granitoid gneisses are well exposed in the Northern Liaoning Province, located north of the ancient Anshan–Benxi terrane along the northeastern margin of the Eastern Block (EB) of the NCC. LA-ICPMS zircon U–Pb isotopic data reveal that granitoid gneisses in the Qingyuan area can be grouped into two major episodes, i.e., ∼2559–2534Ma strongly gneissic quartz dioritic and tonalitic to trondhjemitic gneisses; and ∼2529–2495Ma weakly gneissic to massive quartz monzodioritic and monzogranitic gneisses, with subordinate tonalitic to trondhjemitic gneisses. The late magmatic episode was accompanied by regionally high-grade metamorphism (∼2510–2495Ma). Most granitoid gneisses display highly depleted zircon εHf(t2) values (+4.2 to +8.1), whereas one monzogranitic gneiss shows negative values of −4.7 to −1.0, indicating late Neoarchean crustal growth with minor involvement of ancient continental materials probably sourced from the Anshan–Benxi terrane.Geochemical and petrogenetic studies reveal that the quartz dioritic magmas were derived from partial melting of plagioclase-poor garnet amphibolites or eclogites metamorphosed from oceanic slab materials, with slab melts contaminated by mantle wedge peridotites during ascent. The tonalitic to trondhjemitic magmas stemmed from partial melting of mainly juvenile metabasaltic rocks with minor metagreywackes of lower arc crust. In comparison, the quartz monzodioritic and monzogranitic magmas were derived respectively from partial melting of depleted mantle sources metasomatized by slab-derived fluids and metagreywackes with different crustal resident ages at middle to lower crustal levels.Combined with previous studies of supracrustal metavolcanic rocks, the Northern Liaoning Province records late Neoarchean crustal growth, evolving from mid-ocean ridge, through initiation and maturation of an intra-oceanic arc, to arc–continent collision. Arc–continent accretion and possibly slab rollback processes may have triggered reworking of both juvenile arc crust and minor ancient continental margin materials, generating the magmatic precursors for the monzogranitic gneisses. Overall, the intense late Neoarchean crustal growth of the EB was controlled mainly by arc–continent accretion, possibly linked to global assembly of cratonic fragments.

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