4.6 Article

Granitoids of the Kalba batholith, Eastern Kazakhstan: U-Pb zircon age, petrogenesis and tectonic implications

Journal

LITHOS
Volume 388, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.lithos.2021.106056

Keywords

Granite batholith; Petrogenesis; Granite sources; Central Asian Orogenic Belt

Funding

  1. Russian Foundation for Basic Research [20-35-70076, 20-05-00346]
  2. Russian Science Foundation [20-77-10051]
  3. Hong Kong Research Grant Council [HKU 17302317, HKU17303415]
  4. Ministry of Science and High Education of the Russian Federation [14.Y26.31.0029]
  5. Russian Science Foundation [20-77-10051] Funding Source: Russian Science Foundation

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The Kalba batholith in Eastern Kazakhstan is composed of granodiorite-granite and leucogranite rocks, formed in two different magmatic events. The granodiorite-granite rocks were produced by large-scale crustal melting, while the leucogranites originated from low-degree partial melting of deep sediments. The formation of the batholith spanned about 21 million years, with granodiorites and granites forming between 297-286 Ma and leucogranites between 288-276 Ma.
This is a synthesis of published and new data on the Kalba batholith in Eastern Kazakhstan, the large granitic body in the western part of the Central Asian Orogenic Belt. The batholith consists of granodiorite-granite and leucogranite rocks discriminated on the basis of major-and trace-element chemistry and isotope systematics. The granodiorite-granite rocks, which form the bulk of the batholith, are compositionally variable and can be classified as mixed S-I-type granites. The leucogranites occurring as a few large intrusions in the northwestern part of the batholith have more stable compositions, with high contents of REE, HFSE, F, Li, and B, typical of A-granites. Judging by the isotope systematics of the Kalba granites, compared with that of their potential parent rocks from the Kalba-Narym zone and its surroundings, the two groups originated by different mechanisms in two magmatic events. The granodiorite-granites were produced by large-scale melting of crustal material, including the metabasaltic basement and overlying metavolcanic and metasedimentary rocks. The origin of leucogranites was associated with low-degree partial melting of the deepest Kalba-Narym sediments under the effect of fluoride fluids. The batholith formation spanned about 21 myr: granodiorites and granites formed in the 297-286 Ma interval and leucogranites between 288 and 276 Ma. The ages of the two events bracket the intraplate postorogenic stage of the CAOB history that was coeval to the formation of the Tarim large igneous province. (c) 2021 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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