4.5 Article

High- and low-Cr chromitite and dunite in a Tibetan ophiolite: evolution from mature subduction system to incipient forearc in the Neo-Tethyan Ocean

Journal

CONTRIBUTIONS TO MINERALOGY AND PETROLOGY
Volume 172, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00410-017-1364-y

Keywords

High- and low-Cr chromitite and dunite; Tibetan ophiolites; Compositions and microstructures of chromitites; Melt-peridotite interaction; Subduction episodes in Neo-Tethyan Ocean

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [41520104003]
  2. Ministry of Land and Resources of China [12120115027201]
  3. CCFS ARC Centre of Excellence
  4. Macquarie University International Post-graduate Scholarship
  5. MQ Faculty of Science and Engineering
  6. Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences
  7. DEST Systemic Infrastructure Grants
  8. ARC LIEF
  9. NCRIS/AuScope
  10. Macquarie University
  11. industry partners

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The microstructures, major-and trace-element compositions of minerals and electron backscattered diffraction (EBSD) maps of high- and low-Cr# [spinel Cr# = Cr3+/(Cr3+ + Al3+)] chromitites and dunites from the Zedang ophiolite in the Yarlung Zangbo Suture (South Tibet) have been used to reveal their genesis and the related geodynamic processes in the Neo-Tethyan Ocean. The high-Cr# (0.77-0.80) chromitites (with or without diopside exsolution) have chromite compositions consistent with initial crystallization by interaction between boninitic magmas, harzburgite and reaction-produced magmas in a shallow, mature mantle wedge. Some high-Cr# chromitites show crystal-plastic deformation and grain growth on previous chromite relics that have exsolved needles of diopside. These features are similar to those of the Luobusa high-Cr# chromitites, possibly recycled from the deep upper mantle in a mature subduction system. In contrast, mineralogical, chemical and EBSD features of the Zedang low-Cr# (0.49-0.67) chromitites and dunites and the silicate inclusions in chromite indicate that they formed by rapid interaction between forearc basaltic magmas (MORB-like but with rare subduction input) and the Zedang harzburgites in a dynamically extended, incipient forearc lithosphere. The evidence implies that the high-Cr# chromitites were produced or emplaced in an earlier mature arc (possibly Jurassic), while the low-Cr# associations formed in an incipient forearc during the initiation of a new episode of Neo-Tethyan subduction at similar to 130-120 Ma. This two-episode subduction model can provide a new explanation for the coexistence of high-and low-Cr# chromitites in the same volume of ophiolitic mantle.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.5
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available