4.7 Article

Magmatic history of the northeastern Tibetan Plateau

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AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1029/2002JB001876

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tectonics; China; Tibet; Paleozoic magmatism

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[1] The northeastern margin of the Tibetan Plateau is underlain by the Qaidam and Qilian terranes, which consist primarily of mid-Proterozoic through lower Paleozoic oceanic and arc-type assemblages that have been accreted to the southern margin of the Tarim/Sino-Korean craton. Most previous models suggest that these assemblages formed along a northeast dipping subduction system constructed along the margin of the Tarim/Sino-Korean craton during early Paleozoic time. The main components are interpreted to have formed either as an archipelago of volcanic arcs and back arc basins, or as a broad expanse of accretionary complexes. Our geochronologic data support a model, suggested by Sobel and Arnaud [ 1999], in which the Qaidam and Qilian terranes are separated from the Tarim/Sino-Korean craton by a mid-Paleozoic suture that closed along a southwest dipping subduction zone. The basement to these terranes consists of oceanic assemblages that were amalgamated into a coherent crustal fragment prior to emplacement of -920-930 Ma granitoids. Early Paleozoic arc-type magmatism occurred between -480 and -425 Ma, apparently sweeping southwestward across much of the Qilian and Qaidam terranes. Accretion-related magmatism along the inboard margin of the Qilian terrane occurred between -423 Ma and -406 Ma. Following Silurian-Devonian accretion, the region has experienced late Paleozoic and Mesozoic uplift and erosion and has been severely overprinted by Tertiary thrusting, uplift, and strike-slip motion along the Altyn Tagh fault. Correlation of geologic features and magmatic histories between the Altun Shan and the Nan Shan suggests that the eastern Altyn Tagh fault has a total left-lateral offset of -375 km.

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