Was cratonic Asia deeply subducted beneath the Pamir? Evidence from P–T conditions and tectonic affinities of Cenozoic Pamir crustal xenoliths

Author:

Li Yi‐Peng12ORCID,Ding Lin1,Robinson Alexander C.2,Liu De‐Liang13,Xie Jing1,Zhang Li‐Yun1,Zhao Chen‐Yuan1,Yue Ya‐Hui1,Liu Yiduo2,Oimuhammadzoda Ilhomjon45,Gadoev Mustafo4,Rajabov Negmat4

Affiliation:

1. Key Laboratory of Tibetan Plateau Earth System Science, Environment and Resources, Institute of Tibetan Plateau Research Chinese Academy of Sciences Beijing China

2. Department of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences University of Houston Houston Texas USA

3. Collaborative Innovation Center for Exploration of Strategic Mineral Resources China University of Geosciences Wuhan China

4. Institute of Geology, Earthquake Engineering and Seismology National Academy of Sciences of Tajikistan Dushanbe Republic of Tajikistan

5. Main Department of Geology under the Government of the Republic of Tajikistan Dushanbe Republic of Tajikistan

Abstract

AbstractOne of the most striking geological features of the Pamir is the south‐dipping lithospheric slab beneath the orogen characterized by an intracontinental Wadati‐Benioff zone. A widely accepted hypothesis over the past 40 years interprets the slab to represent southward subducted cratonic Asian continental lithosphere, which predicts significant cratonic Asia‐sourced crustal materials (e.g., Tarim Basin) beneath the Pamir. Alternatively, recent studies have interpreted the slab to be lithosphere delaminated from the base of the Pamir. To test these hypotheses, depth–tectonic affinity relations of crustal xenoliths carried by Miocene volcanic rocks in the eastern Pamir, interpreted to be sourced from the Pamir deep lithosphere, are used to determine whether they represented Asian affinity cratonic crust. Thermodynamic calculations, zircon U–Pb geochronology combined with rare earth element analysis, and whole‐rock major‐trace element and Sr–Nd isotopic analyses document that (1) eclogite and pyroxenite xenoliths (~31–43 kbar/~960–1170°C) are the deepest sourced portions of the lithosphere from ~100 to 140 km depth, the protoliths of which represent the mid‐lower crustal rocks of the Cretaceous Pamir magmatic arc, rather than material from cratonic Asia, and (2) granulite xenoliths (~20 kbar/~900°C) represent the Cenozoic lower crustal rocks of Pamir terranes from ~70 km depth. These results indicate the south‐dipping slab represents delaminated Pamir lower crust and mantle lithosphere, rather than intracontinental subduction of Asian lithosphere, and further support the hypothesis of minimal Cenozoic northward translation of the Pamir.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Geochemistry and Petrology,Geology

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