Abstract:
The Rizhao area of Shandong Province lies on the northeastern margin of the Yangtze block, south of the Tanlu Fault Zone. It is a key region for investigating the breakup processes of the Columbia supercontinent. Due to poor exposure of Paleoproterozoic granitic rocks in this area, the timing of their formation, source characteristics, and tectonic setting have not been adequately addressed. To elucidate the emplacement ages, petrogenesis, and geological background of these Paleoproterozoic granites, this study investigates representative units, including meta-alkali feldspar granite, meta-monzogranite, meta-granodiorite, and meta-tonalite, through systematic petrographic, geochemical, zircon U-Pb geochronology, and Lu-Hf isotopic analyses. Geochemical results indicate that all granites in the study area belong to the subalkaline, high-K series and can be classified as A-, S-, and I-type granites. LA-ICP-MS zircon U-Pb dating yields a weighted mean
207Pb/
206Pb age of 1980 ± 18 Ma for the meta-alkali feldspar granite, indicating its emplacement during the late stage of Columbia supercontinent breakup. Zircon Lu-Hf isotopic compositions show
εHf(
t) values of –10.5 to –7.3,
TDM ages of 2747–2613 Ma, and T^\mathrmC_\mathrmDM ages of 3753–3474 Ma, suggesting that the magma was produced by partial melting of early Archean primitive continental crust. Combined tectonic discrimination diagrams and trace-element signatures reveal that the Paleoproterozoic granites in the region were formed in a post-collisional extensional setting, implying that the Rizhao area may represent one of the earliest sites where the Columbia supercontinent breakup was initiated. This study provides essential geochronological and geochemical constraints for reconstructing the position of the Yangtze block within the Columbia supercontinent and for understanding its rifting processes.