Abstract

Neoarchean granitic rocks are important components of Precambrian cratons, and their petrogenesis can provide constraints for understanding the evolution of continental crust. The Neoarchean potassic granites are widely distributed in southern Jilin Province, which is located in the northeastern part of the North China Craton. Newly obtained field geology observations and petrological, geochemical and geochronological data reveal that the Jiapigou potassic granitic complex is mainly composed of biotite granitic gneiss and medium- to coarse-grained granite. All the granitic gneisses and granites are high-K calcium–alkaline to shoshonite, metaluminous to peraluminous (A/CNK = 0.95–1.13; molar Al2O3/(CaO + Na2O + K2O)), enriched in LILEs and LREEs with strongly fractionated REE patterns ((La/Yb)N = 21–179), and depleted in Nb, Ta, Ti and P. The biotite granitic gneisses have low Rb/Sr ratios (∼0.06) and weak positive Eu anomalies (δEu = 1.26–1.51), while the granites have low Th, U and REEs and strong positive Eu anomalies (δEu = 7.27–16.92). The zircons of these granitic rocks generally have core–rim structures based on cathodoluminescence images and show inherited ages of 2729 ± 10 Ma, crystallization ages of 2523 ± 11 Ma to 2526 ± 15 Ma, and crystallization/metamorphism ages of 2480 ± 15 Ma to 2485 ± 9 Ma. The zircon Hf isotope results of the medium-grained monzogranite show that the εHf(t2) values vary from –2.2 to +5.3, and the two-stage model ages (TDM2) are 2.9–3.0 Ga. The magmatic zircons of the early Neoarchean (∼2.73 Ga) and the late Neoarchean (∼2.52 Ga) crystallized in high-temperature magmas (738–890 °C), whereas those of the early Paleoproterozoic (∼2.48 Ga) crystallized in relatively low-temperature (646–702 °C) magmas. These results indicate that the Jiapigou granitic rocks were products of intracrustal recycling during the late Neoarchean and the early Paleoproterozoic. The protoliths of the Jiapigou granitic gneisses were derived from the remelting of the early Neoarchean juvenile crustal rocks in the lower crust during the late Neoarchean. Subsequently, these granitic rocks underwent amphibolite-facies metamorphism and water-fluxed melting in the early Paleoproterozoic, resulting in the association of migmatic granitic gneisses and potassic granites at the shallow crust level. The cratonization in the Jiapigou terrane involved early Neoarchean (∼2.73 Ga) juvenile crust growth and late Neoarchean (∼2.53–2.52 Ga) to the early Paleoproterozoic (∼2.48 Ga) intracontinental reworking.

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