Abstract

The Jiamusi Block is an important tectonic unit in the Chinese segment of the CAOB. Its eastern margin became an active continental margin in the period of Late Carboniferous. However, the tectonic affinity of this section has not been resolved yet. The Early Permian andesites within the Erlongshan Formation in the eastern Jiamusi Block provide a critical record for the active continental margin setting. Precise LA‐ICP‐MS U–Pb zircon dating on four andesite samples gave ages of 280 ± 3 Ma, 282 ± 3 Ma, 286 ± 4, and 284 ± 2 Ma, respectively, defining an Early Permian age for the crystallization of the andesites. The andesites have medium‐K and calc‐alkaline compositions, with variable SiO2(54.70–57.46 wt%), TiO2(0.87–1.12 wt%), TFe2O3(6.52–8.13 wt%), MgO (2.62–3.33 wt%), Al2O3(15.96–17.83 wt%), Na2O (3.28–4.10 wt%), and K2O (1.16–1.95 wt%) contents. They are relatively enriched in LREEs ((La/Yb)N = 5.0–7.1) and LILEs (e.g., Ba, Th, Sr, and U), deleted in HREEs and HFSEs (e.g., Nb, Ta, Zr, and Y) and have weak or no Eu anomalies (Eu/Eu* = 0.87–1.02). These geochemical features indicate that the andesites within the Erlongshan Formation originated from an active continental margin setting, and their magma source was produced by partial melting of a mantle material that had been metasomatized by subduction‐related melts and subsequently underwent the removal of mafic minerals and accumulation of plagioclase. Integrated with previous studies on the igneous and sedimentary rocks, we thus propose that the Jiamusi Block was in an active continental margin setting in the period of the Late Carboniferous to Early Permian (310–280 Ma), and it is more likely related to the subduction of the Mongol‐Okhotsk Ocean.

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