Abstract

The North China Craton is an ideal place for studying the transition of the Earth's thermal structure and tectonics at the Archean–Proterozoic boundary due to its good preservation of the ~2.5Ga tectono-thermal events. We report the discovery of a high-pressure mafic granulite from the Jiaodong Terrain in the North China Craton. The mafic granulite occurs as garnet–clinopyroxene–orthopyroxene–hornblende gneiss enclaves within a late-Archean trondhjemite–tonalite–granodiorite (TTG) gneiss. Typical high-pressure mineral assemblage of garnet–clinopyroxene–plagioclase–quartz±rutile has been identified. Plagioclase+clinopyroxene±orthopyroxene±hornblende symplectite surrounding garnet (“white eye”) is also observed. Using the conventional geothermobarometry and the pseudosection modeling, a clockwise metamorphic P–T path with the peak conditions at ~17kbar and ~880°C was determined. Zircon U–Pb analyses (SHRIMP) on the overgrowth rim of zircon grains of two samples from the same outcrop yielded a metamorphic age of 2473±6Ma (MSWD=0.8). The analyses on magmatic core gave a probable magmatic age of 2527±12Ma (MSWD=1.9). The high-pressure granulite facies metamorphism corresponds to a collisional event between the ~2.5Ga crust and ~2.9Ga crust at the dawn of Paleoproterozoic in the North China Craton. It also represents a new but rare case of a subduction–collision tectonics at the Archean–Proterozoic transition and provides insight into the change of the Earth's thermal structure.

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