A suite of ~1.84-1.92 Ga metamafic dykes within the paragneiss suite (khondalite) of the Quanji massif in NW China, has been chosen in this study for further understanding the tectonic evolution and possible links to the global Columbia supercontinent. Occurrence and field relations suggest that they were formed coevally with a previous studied ~1.83-1.85 Ga metamafic dyke swarms. Whole-rock major and trace elemental geochemistry suggests precursor magma of the amphibolites being generated from a volcanic arc-related tectonic setting rather than a back-arc environment where the metamafic dyke swarms were emplaced. The metamafic dykes show enrichment of LREE and strongly negative anomalies for Ta-Nb, Zr-Hf and Ti, have high SiO 2 (49.3 wt.%-52.5 wt.%) but low MgO (6.40 wt.%-7.76 wt.%) contents and Mg # (Mg # =[100×(MgO/40.3)]/[MgO/40.3+FeO/71.8]) values (45.7-52.1), suggesting evolved precursor magma. The high values of La/Ta (22.2-42.8) and La/Nb (1.71-2.47), mildly negative ε Nd(t) values (-2.51-0.15), with depleted mantle model ages (T DM ) of 2.45-2.84 Ga, suggest that their precursor magmas were possibly derived from a subduction-related fluid metasomatized Archean sub-continental lithospheric mantle. This study provides further evidence for oceanic plate subduction prevailing before or around ~1.85 Ga, which confirms a prolonged subduction-accretion-collision history in the NW China which is possibly linked to the assembly of the Columbia supercontinent. KEY WORDS: metamafic dyke, geochemistry, petrogenesis, tectonic setting, Quanji massif, NW China.
INTRODUCTIONRecent investigations on supercontinents suggest that the first coherent supercontinent on the Earth, termed Columbia was gradually assembled during 2.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.