4.6 Article

Geodynamic controls on the Paleo-Asian oceanic plate evolution: Constraints from Paleozoic intrusive suites along the northern margin of the North China Block

Journal

LITHOS
Volume 454, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.lithos.2023.107258

Keywords

Zircon U-Pb dating; Sr-Nd-Hf isotopes; Paleozoic intrusive suites; North China Block; Paleo-Asian oceanic plate; Flat-slab subduction

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Identifying the spatio-temporal variations of arc-related magmatism in the northern North China Block is crucial for understanding the subduction processes of the Paleo-Asian oceanic plate. Petrological, geochronological, and geochemical investigations reveal the presence of continental arc magmatism in the Early Paleozoic, followed by a period of flat-slab subduction and subsequent slab retreat in the late Paleozoic. The Carboniferous to Permian period is marked by northward younging and migration of calc-alkaline arc magmatism, indicating further subduction and opening of the mantle wedge along the northern North China Block.
Identifying the spatio-temporal variations of arc-relation magmatism is critical for determining the polarity, geometry, localization, and onset of subduction zones on Earth. When and how the Paleo-Asian oceanic plate subducted beneath the northern margin of the North China Block (NCB) have been widely debated. Here we conducted systematic petrological, geochronological, and geochemical investigations on the Paleozoic magmatic rocks in the northern NCB. The Early Paleozoic magmatic rocks (ca. 490-420 Ma) are only distributed in the Bainaimiao arc and show typical continental arc geochemical characteristics, indicating a south dipping subduction zone. The Devonian alkaline rocks (ca. 400-370 Ma) constitute a similar to 900 km-long magmatic belt in the northern margin of the NCB. Combined with a striking ca. 370-355 Ma magmatic quiescence and the absence of high-pressure rocks during that period, a flat-slab subduction model is proposed to better account for the tectonic evolution of the northern NCB. Subsequently, the Carboniferous to Permian calc-alkaline arc magmatism (ca. 355-250 Ma) began to emerge and showed northward younging and migration, suggesting slab retreat with rollback of the subducting Paleo-Asian slab and again opening of mantle wedge along the northern NCB. Our findings therefore suggest that the Paleozoic magmatism in the northern NCB records an entire spatio-temporal evolution of the Paleo-Asian oceanic plate from early subduction angle deepening to flat-slab subduction, then slab rollback and finally normal subduction. This is tentatively interpreted as a combined effect from the Paleo-Asian oceanic plate subduction angle change and a migrating keel in the mantle wedge region.

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