Abstract

Igneous complexes with diverse magmatic suites provide essential targets for investigating magma differentiation processes and crust-mantle interaction. The North China Craton (NCC) is a crucial window to gain insights into craton destruction through voluminous magmatism during the Mesozoic involving extensive crust-mantle interaction. Here we investigate the granitoid suite from the Laiyuan complex in the central NCC to constrain the magmatic evolution and petrogenetic linkages and to gain insights into the process of crust-mantle interaction related to craton destruction. The Laiyuan granitoid complex comprises syenogranite, monzogranite, quartz monzonite and monzonite with mafic magmatic enclaves (MMEs). The granitoids were formed during the Early Cretaceous (137–128 Ma) with εHf(t) values and TDMC ages ranging from −21.8 to −16.8 and 2564 to 2255 Ma, respectively. The compositional variations of the different rock types suggest distinct magmatic evolution and petrogenesis. Geochemical and isotopic data indicate that the enriched lithospheric mantle-derived mafic magmas underwent early-stage plagioclase-dominated and late-stage hornblende-dominated fractional crystallization to form the monzonites and quartz monzonites. Geochemical modeling results suggest that the magma of the MMEs originated through mixing between lithospheric mantle-derived mafic magma and crust-derived felsic magma with post-injection hybridization to generate MMEs with variable compositions. The monzogranites are classified as high-K calc-alkaline I-type granites with higher SiO2 contents (69–71 wt%) and lower Mg# (41–44) than intermediate rocks. They were generated by partial melting of the basaltic lower crust, with the addition of mafic magma from an enriched mantle. The highly fractionated syenogranites with lower Mg# (18–27) were evolved from the monzogranitic magma through plagioclase-dominated crystal removal. The adakitic affinities of the monzonites and monzogranites were generated by crystallization of mantle-derived magmas and partial melting of continental crust of normal thickness (~40 km), respectively. The bottom-up crust-mantle interaction accounts for the compositional diversity of the Laiyuan granitoids, and suggests that thermo-mechanical destruction played a dominant role in the destruction of the central NCC as compared with the continental delamination process in the eastern NCC.

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