Abstract

Continents on the early earth are considered to have been built through the accretion of microterranes, oceanic arcs and plateaus. The North China Craton (NCC), envisaged in recent models as a collage of several microblocks which were amalgamated along multiple zones of ocean closure during the late Neoarchean, provide a typical case to investigate the origin and amalgamation of microcontinents through convergent margin processes. Here we report a suite of magmatic rocks developed at the periphery of one of these microblocks, the Jiaoliao Block, that forms part of the composite Eastern Block of the NCC. We integrate our new data with those from various parts of this microblock to elucidate the mechanism of continent building in the Archean. We present petrological, geochemical and zircon U–Pb geochronological and Lu-Hf isotopic data from the magmatic suite that belongs to the Yishui Complex. Geochemically, the felsic units of the suite straddle from monzonite through granodiorite to granite with dominantly metaluminous affinity, magnesian composition and arc-related features. The metagranites, TTG gneisses and charnockites are characterized by negative Nb-Ta anomalies and positive K and Pb anomalies. The diorites and gabbros display negative anomalies of Th-U, Nb-Ta and Zr-Hf and positive anomalies at Ba, Pb and Sm with negative Eu anomalies and minor positive Ce anomalies, attesting to arc-related features. In the tectonic discrimination diagrams, the rocks plot in the volcanic arc field, indicating arc-related origin in subduction setting.Zircon grains from all the rocks display core–rim texture with the cores showing magmatic crystallization and the narrow structureless rims corresponding to metamorphic overgrowth. The magmatic zircons from the metagranites show upper intercept ages or 207Pb/206Pb weighted mean ages of 2505±29Ma and 2569±20Ma to 2513±27Ma, those from the TTG gneisses show 2535±17Ma to 2546±39Ma, from charnockites display 2543±20Ma–2555±15Ma, and diorite and gabbro show 2587±15Ma and 2516±13Ma respectively. The zircon rim ages of 2472±23Ma, 2457±35Ma, 2545±30Ma and 2511±35Ma suggest the timing of metamorphism (ca. 2.55–2.45Ga). Magmatic zircons with slightly older ages of ca. 2.73Ga, 2.64Ga also occur suggesting multiple magmatic pulses. The Lu-Hf isotopic data show positive εHf(t) values ranging from 0.2 to 5.7 for metagranites, with Hf model ages of 2602–2815Ma (TDM) and 2658–3002Ma (TDMC), whereas for TTG gneisses, the positive εHf(t) values are up to 6.5 and display dominant Mesoarchean Hf model ages with limited early Neoarchean Hf model ages. Charnockite samples show positive εHf(t) values 2.3–5.7 and display the Hf model ages ranging from 2601Ma to 2772Ma (TDM) and 2658Ma to 2904Ma (TDMC). Diorite and gabbro also show positive εHf(t) (2.3–6.9) and yield Hf model ages of 2625–2788Ma (TDM) and 2647Ma to 2903Ma (TDMC). The Hf isotopic data indicate that the magmas were derived from Neoarchean-Mesoarchean juvenile sources.Integrating our data with those from the entire Jiaoliao microblock reveals vestiges of Hadean crust involved in building the Eoarchean nucleus of this microblock. Vigorous convergent margin processes ranging from Mesoarchean to late Neoarchean with multiple pules of arc magmatism associated with subduction tectonics led to further growth of continental crust, culminating in paired high temperature and high pressure metamorphism during late Neoarchean – early Paleoproterozoic transition.

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