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Journal of Petrology Volume 41 Number 7 Pages 933-950 2000
© Oxford University Press 2000
On and Off the North China Craton: Where is the Archaean Keel?
1DEPARTMENT OF GEOLOGY, ROYAL HOLLOWAY UNIVERSITY OF LONDON, EGHAM TW20 OEX, UK
2CHANGSHA INSTITUTE OF GEOTECTONICS, ACADEMIA SINICA, CHANGSHA, HUNAN 410013, P.R. CHINA
3INSTITUTE OF GEOLOGY AND GEOPHYSICS, CHINESE ACADEMY OF SCIENCES, BEIJING 100029, P.R. CHINA
4DANISH LITHOSPHERE CENTRE, 10 ØSTER VOLDGADE, 1350 KØBENHAVN, DENMARK
5KINGSTON UNIVERSITY, PENRHYN ROAD, KINGSTON UPON THAMES KT1 2EE, UK
6VENING MEINESZ SCHOOL OF GEODYNAMICS, UTRECHT UNIVERSITY, 3508 TA UTRECHT, NETHERLANDS
Geophysical data indicate that the lithosphere beneath the North China Craton (NCC) is
80 km thick with high heat flow within the craton. This is somewhat in disagreement with the presence of Archaean crustal rocks and kimberlite-hosted xenoliths that point to the existence of garnetdiamond-facies mantle beneath the craton, as recently as the Ordovician. Basalt-hosted mantle xenoliths entrained during the Cenozoic may provide a clue to Phanerozoic changes. Of particular note is the predominance of spinel-facies peridotites (7580 km) and the paucity of garnet-facies peridotites. The modal mineralogy of the spinel peridotites is similar to that observed in peridotite xenoliths from the lower oceanic lithosphere but distinct from that of abyssal peridotites. The orthopyroxene/olivine ratio is like that of peridotites from ocean basins and tectonically active continents, and the peridotites have depleted Sr and Nd isotopic ratios similar to those of oceanic basalts. The basalt-hosted xenolith data from eastern China support geophysical data in revealing the presence of thin, hot lithosphere with a similarity, over distances of several thousand kilometres, to that found beneath tectonically active continents or ocean basins. These data do not, however, allow us to constrain which of the thermo-tectonic processes (i.e. plume, extension, delamination) was responsible for the loss of the cold, thick Archaean lithospheric root (
200 km) in the last 400 my. What is clear is that the pre-existent, presumably heterogeneous, Archaean lithosphere has been very effectively replaced by oceanic-like mantle. The extent to which it was totally replaced is open to debate.
KEY WORDS: North China Craton; mantle xenoliths; oceanic affinity
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