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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Zircon ages and Hf isotopic compositions of Ordovician and Carboniferous granitoids from central Inner Mongolia and their significance for early and late Paleozoic evolution of the Central Asian Orogenic Belt
Alfred KrönerYuruo ShiCui LiuPing JianWei ZhangLinlin Lisubject
geographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryPaleozoic020209 energyMetamorphic rockPlutonGeochemistryGeology02 engineering and technology010502 geochemistry & geophysics01 natural sciencesCratonPaleontologyCarboniferous0202 electrical engineering electronic engineering information engineeringOrdovicianGeology0105 earth and related environmental sciencesEarth-Surface ProcessesTerraneZircondescription
Abstract We present zircon ages and Hf-in-zircon isotopic data for plutonic rocks and review the evolution of central Inner Mongolia, China, in the early and late Paleozoic. Zircons of a granodiorite yielded a 206 Pb/ 238 U age of 472 ± 3 Ma that reflects the time of early Paleozoic magmatism. Zircon ages were also obtained for a tonalite (329 ± 3 Ma), quartz-diorite (320 ± 3 Ma), and granite vein (297 ± 2 Ma). Our results, in combination with published zircon ages and geochemical data, document distinct magmatic episodes in central Inner Mongolia. The dated samples are mostly granodiorite, tonalite and quartz-diorite in composition with intermediate to high-silica, high Na 2 O (3.08–4.26 wt.%), low K 2 O (0.89–2.86 wt.%), and high Na 2 O/K 2 O and Sr/Y ratios. Their chondrite-normalized REE patterns are characterized by LREE enrichment. In mantle-normalized multi-element variation diagrams they show typical negative Nb and Ta anomalies, and all samples display positive e Hf ( t ) and e Nd ( t ) values, and low I Sr . The Ordovician rocks, however, show higher Sr/Y and La/Yb ratios than the Carboniferous samples, implying that the older granitoids represent adakitic granitoids, and the Carboniferous granitoids are typical subduction-related arc granitoids but also with adakite-like compositions. The results are compatible with the view that the Central Asian Orogenic Belt (CAOB) in Inner Mongolia evolved through operation of several subduction systems with different polarities: an early–middle Paleozoic subduction and accretion system along the northern margin of the North China Craton and the southern margin of the Mongolian terrane, and late Paleozoic northward subduction along the northern orogen and exhumation of a high-pressure metamorphic terrane on the northern margin of the North China Craton.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2016-03-01 | Journal of Asian Earth Sciences |