4.7 Article

Tibetan basement rocks near Amdo reveal missing Mesozoic tectonism along the Bangong suture, central Tibet

Journal

GEOLOGY
Volume 34, Issue 6, Pages 505-508

Publisher

GEOLOGICAL SOC AMER, INC
DOI: 10.1130/G22453.1

Keywords

Tibet; Bangong Suture; terrane accretion; continental arcs; continental collision

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The U-Pb and Ar-40/Ar-31 studies of a unique exposure of crystalline basement along the Jurassic-Early Cretaceous Bangong suture of central Tibet reveal previously unrecognized records of Mesozoic metamorphism, magmatism, and exhumation. The basement includes Cambrian and older orthogneisses that underwent amphibolite facies metamorphism coeval with extensive granitoid emplacement at 185-170 Ma. The basement cooled to similar to 300 degrees C by 165 Ma and was exhumed to upper crustal levels in the hanging wall of a south-directed thrust system during Early Cretaceous time. We attribute Jurassic metamorphism and magmatism to the development of a continental arc during Bangong Ocean subduction, and Early Cretaceous exhumation to northward continental underthrusting of the Lhasa terrane beneath the Qiangtang terrane. We speculate that a Jurassic arc extended regionally along the length of the Bangong suture, but in all other places in Tibet has been buried, either depositionally or structurally, beneath supracrustal assemblages.

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