4.5 Article Proceedings Paper

Geological development and Phanerozoic crustal accretion in the western segment of the southern Tien Shan (Kyrgyzstan, Uzbekistan and Tajikistan)

Journal

TECTONOPHYSICS
Volume 328, Issue 1-2, Pages 1-14

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/S0040-1951(00)00175-X

Keywords

Phanerozoic crustal accretion; southern Tien Shan

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The Tien Shan form a high intracontinental mountain belt, lying north of the main India-Asia collision mountains, and consist of re-activated Paleozoic orogens. The western segment of the southern Tien Shan lies northwest of the Pamir and west of the Talas-Fergana fault. The stratigraphy, lithology, igneous and metamorphic petrology and geochemistry of this segment indicate that it was formed by the assembly of Lower Paleozoic area which developed into microcontinents with Upper Paleozoic mature shelf and slope elastic and carbonate sediments. Precambrian continental crust is confined to two small blocks along its southern margin. The bulk of the southern Tien Shan consists of ?Vendian to Silurian oceanic and slope elastic rocks, resting on oceanic lithosphere, and overlain by thick passive margin Devonian to mid-Carboniferous mature shelf clastics and carbonates. These are unconformably overlain by syn- and post-orogenic immature elastic sediments derived from mountains on the north formed by closure of a Calboniferus southern Tajik and a northern Vendian to Carboniferous Turkestan ocean with the southern Tien Shan microcontinent sandwiched between. Associated with these collisions an late Carboniferous to Permian intrusives, which form three south to north (though overlapping) suites; a southern calc-alkaline granodiorite-granite suite, an intermediate gabbro-monzodiorite-granite suite, and a northern alkaline monzodiorite-granite-alaskite suite. The gabbro-monzodiorite-granite suite forms the earliest subduction-related magmatism of the southern Tien Shan: rare earth element patterns are consistent with derivation from a primitive or slightly enriched mantle. The other suites show more crustal contamination. Rb and Sr vary with depth and degree of partial melting and are consistent with progressive involvement of crustal material in partial melts during collision. The gradual change in composition within each complex, lasting in some cases from 295 to 250 Ma (the entire Permian), may be explained by a consecutive shift in the melting sedimentary cover of the subducting plate from oceanic crust through transitional crust to marginal continental crust. Like the Central Asian orogenic belt (the main focus of IGCP 420), the Tien Shan represent a net addition of continental crust during the Phanerozoic. Very little of the belt has any Precambrian precursor. (C) 2000 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.

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