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Petrogenesis of Early Cretaceous adakitic granodiorite: Implication for a crust thickening event within the Cathaysia Block, South China.

Authors :
Sun, LiQiang
Ling, HongFei
Zhao, KuiDong
Chen, PeiRong
Chen, WeiFeng
Sun, Tao
Shen, WeiZhou
Huang, GuoLong
Source :
SCIENCE CHINA Earth Sciences; Jul2017, Vol. 60 Issue 7, p1237-1255, 19p
Publication Year :
2017

Abstract

Adakitic rocks in continental settings are commonly considered to be formed by partial melting of thickened or delaminated lower crust. Investigations on this kind of rocks can provide important information about crustal evolution complementary to information from other rocks. This paper reports adakitic granodiorite of the Lingxi pluton in the interior of the Cathayisa Block. LA-ICP-MS zircon U-Pb dating shows that it was formed in the late Early Cretaceous (100±1 Ma). The granodiorite has geochemical features of adakitic rocks derived from partial melting of the thickened lower crust, e.g., high SiO (mainly ranging from 64.4 to 68.9 wt.%) and Sr (624-894 ppm) contents, Sr/Y (49.9-60.8) and La/Yb (23.4-42.8) values, low Y (10.3-17.1 ppm), Ni (5.62-11.8 ppm) and MgO (mostly from 0.86 wt.% to 1.57 wt.%) contents and weak Eu anomaly. It has initial Sr/Sr ratios of 0.7086-0.7091, ε ( t) values of −6.2 to −5.9 and zircon ε ( t) values mostly of −10.1 to −7.6. Based on the geochemical characteristics and simple modelling, it is suggested that the most likely generation mechanism of the Lingxi granodiorite is partial melting of a thickened Proterozoic lower continental crust at a pressure ≥12 kbar (or crust thickness ≥40 km), leaving a garnet-bearing amphibolite residue. Combining our results and previous studies of the tectonic evolution of the Cathaysia Block, we propose that the crust was thickened to over 40 km by a compressive event occurring during the late Early Cretaceous, which is supported by the observation that there is an angular unconformity between the Upper Cretaceous Series and the early Lower Cretaceous or the Jurassic rocks. After this event, the Cathaysia Block experienced a lithospheric extension and thinning probably driven by the high-angle paleo-Pacific subduction. With the attenuation of lithosphere, the lower crust was heated to partial melting by upwelling asthenospheric materials, resulting in generation of the Lingxi granodiorite and other coeval granitoids in the Cathaysia Block. This study provides new information on the crustal evolution of the Cathaysia Block during the Early Cretaceous. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
16747313
Volume :
60
Issue :
7
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
SCIENCE CHINA Earth Sciences
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
124202537
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11430-016-5200-y