Affiliation:
1. Xinjiang Research Center for Mineral Resources Xinjiang Institute of Ecology and Geography Chinese Academy of Sciences Urumqi China
2. Redrock Mining. Co., Ltd. Hami China
3. State Key Laboratory of Lithospheric Evolution Institute of Geology and Geophysics Chinese Academy of Sciences Beijing China
4. College of Earth and Planetary Sciences University of Chinese Academy of Sciences Beijing China
5. China‐Pakistan Joint Research Center on Earth Sciences Chinese Academy of Sciences Beijing China
Abstract
AbstractThe subduction initiation and the early‐stage tectonics of the southern Paleo‐Asian Ocean have rarely been discussed. To address these problems, we report new geochemical and geochronological data of arc‐related volcanic rocks in the Huaniushan arc of the southern Beishan. Basaltic andesites and high‐Mg rocks yield zircon U‐Pb ages of 449–422 Ma and 460–437 Ma, respectively. The basaltic andesite is a continental arc‐related tholeiite with moderate amounts of TiO2; and is enriched in light rare earth elements (LREE), such as Rb, Ba, Th and Sr; it is also depleted in Nb, Ta and Eu; and has moderate εHf (t) (−0.3 to +5.5) and εNd (t) (−3.48 to +0.03) values; and high (87Sr/86Sr)i (0.7066–0.7079) values. The high‐Mg andesite and dacite are sanukitic‐type high‐Mg rocks, which have high MgO (Mg# = 49–62) contents, A/CNK (0.82–2.36) and (La/Sm)N values, low Sr/Y (3–15) and Ba/Th (11–182) ratios, moderate to low εHf (t) (−16.7 to +7.6) and εNd (t) (−3.74 to +0.05), and high (87Sr/86Sr)i values. All geochemical data indicate that they were sourced from mixing between mantle‐peridotite‐derived melts and silicic melts generated by the subducting oceanic slab and/or sediments in a hot subduction setting. After integrating the Sanukitic high‐Mg andesites (HMAs) with previously reported Nb‐enriched basalt, volumes of arc‐related tholeiitic to calc‐alkaline volcanic rocks, I‐ to S‐type granites, and HT eclogites, we conclude that the subduction initiation was one of the most likely geodynamic process for the metamorphism and magmatism in the Middle Ordovician to early Silurian.
Funder
National Natural Science Foundation of China
Chinese Academy of Sciences
National Key Research and Development Program of China
Ministry of Land and Resources of the People's Republic of China
Publisher
American Geophysical Union (AGU)
Subject
General Earth and Planetary Sciences,Environmental Science (miscellaneous)