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Contribution of crustal anatexis to the tectonic evolution of Indian crust beneath southern Tibet

Jess King, Nigel Harris, Tom Argles, Randall Parrish and Zhang Hongfei
Contribution of crustal anatexis to the tectonic evolution of Indian crust beneath southern Tibet
Geological Society of America Bulletin (January 2011) 123 (1-2): 218-239

Abstract

This geochemical, geochronological, and structural study of intrusive rocks in the Sakya dome of southern Tibet has identified two distinct suites of anatectic granites that carry contrasting implications for the tectonic evolution of the India-Asia collision zone. The northern margin of the dome core was intruded by anastomosing, equigranular two-mica garnet granites between 28.1+ or -0.4 Ma and 22.6+ or -0.4 Ma, coeval with top-to-the-south shear. Trace-element and isotopic (Sr-Nd) characteristics indicate an origin from partial melting of a biotite-bearing source in the Indian crust under conditions of high-fluid-phase activity. These granites thus provide evidence for the melt weakening required by some thermo-mechanical models that predict the southward extrusion of a low-viscosity channel during the Oligocene. Evidence for subsequent shear-sense reversal may document initiation of this process. However, a younger suite of porphyritic two-mica granite plutons, emplaced between 14.5+ or -0.9 Ma and 8.81+ or -0.22 Ma, is derived from anatexis of muscovite-bearing metasediments of the High Himalayan Series under fluid-absent conditions. Ar-Ar cooling ages of 14.4-8.0 Ma from the Sakya dome postdate crystallization of the Oligocene granite suite by approximately 10 m.y. but are coincident with mid-Miocene granite emplacement, suggesting uplift to depths of <10 km by the mid-Miocene. We propose that plate flexural response to Miocene slab steepening was a likely cause of dome uplift, and that this exhumation of midcrustal rocks triggered decompression melting at 15-9 Ma and emplacement of discrete granite plutons into the upper crust under brittle conditions.


ISSN: 0016-7606
EISSN: 1943-2674
Coden: BUGMAF
Serial Title: Geological Society of America Bulletin
Serial Volume: 123
Serial Issue: 1-2
Title: Contribution of crustal anatexis to the tectonic evolution of Indian crust beneath southern Tibet
Affiliation: University of Hong Kong, Department of Earth Sciences, Hong Kong, China
Pages: 218-239
Published: 201101
Text Language: English
Publisher: Geological Society of America (GSA), Boulder, CO, United States
References: 98
Accession Number: 2011-012646
Categories: Solid-earth geophysics
Document Type: Serial
Bibliographic Level: Analytic
Annotation: With GSA Data Repository Item 2010134; includes appendix
Illustration Description: illus. incl. sect., 3 tables, geol. sketch maps
N28°00'00" - N30°00'00", E86°00'00" - E90°00'00"
Secondary Affiliation: Open University, GBR, United KingdomUniversity of Leicester, GBR, United KingdomChina University of Geosciences, CHN, China
Country of Publication: United States
Secondary Affiliation: GeoRef, Copyright 2019, American Geosciences Institute. Reference includes data from GeoScienceWorld, Alexandria, VA, United States. Reference includes data supplied by the Geological Society of America, Boulder, CO, United States
Update Code: 201108

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