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Continental crustal growth and the supercontinental cycle: evidence from the Central Asian Orogenic Belt
Authors:Dawei Hong  Jisheng Zhang  Tao Wang  Shiguang Wang  Xilin Xie
Institution:a Institute of Geology, Chinese Academy of Geological Sciences, Beijing 100037, China;b Department of Geology, Peking University, Beijing 100871, China;c Institute of Mineral Deposits, Chinese Academy of Geological Sciences, Beijing 100037, China
Abstract:Studies of supercontinental cycle are mainly concentrated on the assembly, breakup and dispersal of supercontinents, and studies of continental crustal growth largely on the growth and loss (recycling) of the crust. These two problems have long been studied separately from each other. The Paleozoic–Mesozoic granites in the Central Asian Orogenic Belt have commonly positive Nd values, implying large-scale continental crustal growth in the Phanerozoic. They coincided temporally and spatially with the Phanerozoic Pangea supercontinental cycle, and overlapped in space with the P-wave high-V anomalies and calculated positions of subducted slabs for the last 180 Ma, all this suggests that the Phanerozoic Laurasia supercontinental assembly was accompanied by large-scale continental crustal growth in central Asia. Based on these observations, this paper proposes that there may be close and original correlations between a supercontinental cycle, continental crustal growth and catastrophic slab avalanches in the mantle. In this model we suggest that rapid continental crustal growth occurred during supercontinent assembly, whereas during supercontinental breakup and dispersal new additions of the crust were balanced by losses, resulting in a steady state system. Supercontinental cycle and continental crustal growth are both governed by changing patterns of mantle convection.
Keywords:Continental crustal growth  Supercontinent  Central Asian Orogenic Belt
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