4.7 Article

Late Permian Bimodal Volcanic Rocks in the Northern Qiangtang Terrane, Central Tibet: Evidence for Interaction Between the Emeishan Plume and the Paleo-Tethyan Subduction System

Journal

JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-SOLID EARTH
Volume 123, Issue 8, Pages 6540-6561

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1029/2018JB015568

Keywords

subduction zone; Emeishan plume; Tibet; Paleo-Tethys

Funding

  1. National Key R & D Program of China [2016YFC0600407]
  2. Key Program of the Chinese Academy of Sciences [QYZDJ-SSW-DQC026]
  3. National Natural Science Foundation of China [41573027, 41630208]
  4. Talent Project of Guangdong Province [2014TX01Z079]
  5. Key Science Program of Guangzhou City [201707020032]
  6. Guangzhou Institute of Geochemistry, Chinese Academy of Sciences (GIGCAS 135 Project) [135TP201601]

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Many studies provide compelling evidence for a fossil mantle plume beneath the Late Permian Emeishan large igneous province located near the southeastern margin of the central Tibetan Plateau, a region associated with the Paleo-Tethyan subduction system. However, little is known about whether direct plume-subduction interaction occurred during the Late Permian. Here we report geochronological, mineralogical, geochemical, and Sr-Nd-Hf-O isotopic data for the Late Permian (similar to 259-256 Ma) bimodal volcanic rocks (BVRs) in the northern Qiangtang Terrane (NQT), central Tibet. These BVRs consist mainly of basalts, rhyolites, and rhyolitic tuffs. The rhyolites with A-type affinity were generated by partial melting of newly underplated basalts. Geochemical and isotopic data suggest that two components (ocean island basalt-type mantle and subducted sediment-derived fluid) were involved in the generation of the basalts in an extensional back-arc region. Considering the Permian tectonic evolution of the NQT, we propose that this enriched ocean island basalt-type mantle was distinct from the Paleo-Tethyan depleted upper mantle. It most likely originated from Emeishan-plume material that flowed westward from the South China Block to the nearby NQT, driven by slab rollback-induced counterflow. The presence of high-temperature A-type rhyolites in bimodal back-arc magmatism also indicates a special subduction setting influenced by a nearby plume. Thus, we propose that the Late Permian BVRs were the result of interaction between the Emeishan plume and the Paleo-Tethyan subduction system.

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