• Title of article

    Hf–Nd–O isotopic evidence for melting of recycled sediments beneath the Sulu Orogen, North China

  • Author/Authors

    Guo، نويسنده , , Feng and Fan، نويسنده , , Weiming and Li، نويسنده , , Chaowen and Wang، نويسنده , , Christina Yan and Li، نويسنده , , Hongxia and Zhao، نويسنده , , Liang and Li، نويسنده , , Jingyan، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2014
  • Pages
    16
  • From page
    243
  • To page
    258
  • Abstract
    The mantle source of late Mesozoic mafic magmas in the southeastern North China Craton is generally considered to have been enriched by deeply subducted continental lithosphere of the Yangtze Block. The mechanisms through which enrichment occurs are still unclear. Here we document an Early Cretaceous (zircon U–Pb age at 115 ± 2 Ma) dioritic intrusion with some geochemical features similar to sanukitoids (i.e., Al2O3 > 17.5%, Ba = 1692–1819 ppm, Sr = 1042–1111 ppm and δ18OZircon = 6.2 ± 0.2‰) from the Sulu Orogen in North China. Compared with the regional older (120–130 Ma) mafic magmas (dykes), the diorite has less radiogenic Sr (87Sr/86Sr(i) ~ 0.7075), higher εNd(t) (− 9.0 to − 8.6) with less radiogenic Hf than Nd (ΔεHf(t) = − 6.1 to − 5.2; ΔεHf(t) = εHf(t) − 1.36 × εNd(t) − 2.89), signatures typically observed from continental zircon-bearing sediments. The primary magma of the dioritic intrusion was probably derived from a mantle enriched by the addition of a significant volume of a restitic component of recycled sediment that had been previously melted to leave residual zircon. Combined Hf–Nd–O isotopic data for the Rushan dioritic intrusion and the earlier mafic rocks requires the involvement of recycled sediments or their melts, incorporated into the lithospheric mantle as lenses or metasomatic veins, to produce a pudding-cake structure beneath the Sulu Orogen.
  • Keywords
    Recycled sediments , Pudding-cake lithospheric mantle , Hf–Nd–O isotopes , The Sulu orogen , Late Mesozoic
  • Journal title
    Chemical Geology
  • Serial Year
    2014
  • Journal title
    Chemical Geology
  • Record number

    2262415