4.6 Article

Highly evolved juvenile granites with tetrad REE patterns: the Woduhe and Baerzhe granites from the Great Xing'an Mountains in NE China

Journal

LITHOS
Volume 59, Issue 4, Pages 171-198

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/S0024-4937(01)00066-4

Keywords

granitoid; A-type granite; REE tetrad effect; water-rock interaction; Nd-Sr isotopes; O-18 depletion

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In NE China, voluminous granitoids were emplaced in late Paleozoic and Mesozoic times. We report here Sr-Nd-O isotopic and elemental abundance data for two highly evolved granitic plutons, Woduhe and Baerzhe, from the Great Xing'an Mountains. They show a rather juvenile Sr-Nd isotopic signature and a spectacular tetrad effect in their R-EE distribution patterns as well as non-CHARAC (charge-and-radius-controlled) trace element behavior. The emplacement ages are constrained at 130 +/-4 Ma for the Woduhe and 122 +/-5 Ma for the Baerzhe granites by Rb-Sr and Sm-Nd isotope analyses. Both granites are also characterized by low but imprecise initial Sr-87/Sr-86 ratios of about 0.703. The Nd-Sr isotope data argue for their generation by melting of dominantly juvenile mantle component with subordinate recycled ancient crust. This is largely compatible with the general scenario for much of the Phanerozoic granitoids emplaced in the Central Asian Orogenic Belt. The parental magmas for both the Woduhe and Baerzhe granites have undergone extensive magmatic differentiation, during which intense interaction of the residual melts with aqueous hydrothermal fluids (probably rich in F and Cl) resulted in the non-CHARAC trace element behavior and the tetrad effect of REE distribution. Both the Woduhe and Baerzhe granites show the characteristic trace element patterns of rare-metal granites, but their absolute abundances differ by as much as two orders of magnitude. The oxygen isotope compositions of the two granites have been severely disturbed. Significant O-18 depletion in feldspar, but not so much in quartz, suggests that the hydrothermal alteration took place in a temperature condition of 300-500 degreesC. This subsolidus hydrothermal alteration is decoupled from the late-stage magma-fluid interaction at higher temperatures. Despite the two distinct and intense events of water-rock interaction, the Rb-Sr and Sm-Nd geochronological systems seem to have maintained closed, hence, suggesting that the two events occurred shortly after the plutonic emplacements. (C) 2001 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.

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