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Significant Increase of Continental Freeboard During the Early Paleoproterozoic: Insights From Metasediment‐Derived Granites
27
Citations
54
References
2021
Year
EngineeringContinental TectonicsPrecambrian GeologyContinental FreeboardTectonic EvolutionContinental EmergenceEarth ScienceSignificant IncreaseMetamorphic PetrologyZircon δ 18Mesozoic TectonicsGeochronologyMarine GeologyGeologyMetasediment‐derived GranitesHigh ZirconTectonicsGeochemistryPetrology
Abstract Subaerial continental crust plays a fundamental role in modulating the composition of the ocean, atmosphere, and biosphere, but the timing and rate of continental emergence above sea level remain unclear. Here, we use the zircon oxygen isotopic compositions of early Paleoproterozoic metasediment‐derived granitoids from the southwestern Yangtze Block to constrain the rapidity of continental emergence. Statistical analyses of compiled igneous and detrital zircon oxygen isotopic database show a rapid increase in zircon δ 18 O at ∼2.36 Ga. We suggest that this isotopic shift is best explained by a significant increase of continental freeboard between ∼2.43 and ∼2.36 Ga due to the increasing strength of the continental lithosphere since the late Archean, concomitantly yielding a high‐δ 18 O sedimentary reservoir. Subsequent melting of these high‐δ 18 O sediments in a variety of tectonic regimes results in high zircon δ 18 O.
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