Subduction erosion revealed by exhumed lower arc crustal rocks in an accretionary complex, northeastern China

Author:

Xu Mengyu12,Xiao Wenjiao123ORCID,Liu Kai4,Wan Bo12,Mitchell Ross N.12,Rosenbaum Gideon5,Wang Hao3

Affiliation:

1. 1State Key Laboratory of Lithospheric Evolution, Institute of Geology and Geophysics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100029, China

2. 2College of Earth and Planetary Sciences, University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100049, China

3. 3Xinjiang Research Center for Mineral Resources, Xinjiang Institute of Ecology and Geography, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Urumqi 830011, China

4. 4School of the Earth Sciences and Resources, China University of Geosciences, Beijing 100083, China

5. 5School of the Environment, The University of Queensland, Brisbane, Queensland 4072, Australia

Abstract

Abstract Subduction erosion at convergent margins is a leading mechanism for the destruction (recycling and reworking) of continental crust. But because of the lack of direct evidence, it is not straightforward to identify erosive events and their intensities in fossil subduction zones. The Heilongjiang accretionary complex in northeastern China was formed during the early Mesozoic subduction of the Paleo-Pacific Ocean. We investigated amphibolites from this accretionary complex, whose protoliths (based on whole-rock trace elements and Sr-Nd-Hf isotopes) were mafic continental arc magmatic rocks (255–249 Ma; zircon core U-Pb ages) from the upper plate. Phase equilibria modeling constrained by mineral geochemistry indicates that the amphibolites and their wall rocks were first heated to low granulite facies (750–800 °C, ~7 kbar) at 251–244 Ma (zircon rim U-Pb ages) and then cooled to ~700 °C with increasing pressure (8–9 kbar) before 213–187 Ma (titanite and apatite U-Pb ages). To explain the occurrence of the lower arc crustal lithologies in the accretionary complex and their metamorphic history, we propose that the subducting plate strongly eroded the forearc crust, allowing the plate interface to advance landward and scrape the amphibolites and wall rocks formed under the old arc, which finally were exhumed along the subduction channel and became components of the complex. The case study exemplifies direct petrological evidence of strong subduction erosion occurring in an ancient orogen, thus implying that consumption of the entire forearc crust could occur within only ~50 m.y.

Publisher

Geological Society of America

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