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The mafic rocks of Shao La (Kharta, S. Tibet): Ordovician basaltic magmatism in the greater himalayan crystallines of central-eastern Himalaya

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Visona, Dario
Rubatto, Daniela
Villa, Igor M

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Pergamon-Elsevier Ltd

Abstract

In the Kharta area, east of Mount Everest, the Greater Himalayan Crystallines are significantly richer in mafic rocks than the surrounding areas, Sikkim-West Bhutan and Makalu-Cho Oyu. These rocks are lenses with a complex metamorphic history. The mafic lenses of Shao La, in the Greater Himalayan Sequence south of Kharta, are here considerated as dismembered dykes apparently escaped the Himalayan high-temperature metamorphism and only record a low-grade metamorphic event. They are calc-alkaline medium-K basalts to basaltic andesites, consisting of plagioclase (core 62% An and rim 55% An), augite (Wo43-47En3636-37Fs16-20), hypersthene (Wo1.6-3.3En50-52Fs46-48), and minor brown hornblende, biotite and ilmenite. They show strong enrichment in low ionic potential elements relative to high-field-strength elements, and only minor Ce and P enrichment with respect to MORB. Combined Sr-Nd systematics suggest contamination of a basic magma from a subcontinental mantle source with a small amount of crust (about 4 vol.%). This in turn indicates that the Shao La basalts and basaltic andesites have the geochemical fingerprint of a supra-subduction zone magma. U-Pb dating of zircon from one sample yielded an age of 457 ± 6 Ma for the crystallisation of the Shao La basic rocks, assigning them to the Cambro-Ordovician Bhimphedian orogenic event. The age and geochemical characteristics of the Shao La rocks are similar to those of the basic rocks of the Cambro-Ordovician Mandi pluton further west. This suggests the existence of an extensive supra-subduction zone magmatism along the Indian margin of Gondwana. Like the bimodal granite-gabbro magmatism in the Mandi-Kaplas area, the Shao La basic rocks are contemporaneous with the emplacement of granitic plutons in the Everest-Kharta area. This acid plutonism is interpreted as crustal melt triggered by the upwelling of metasomatised mantle in a back-arc setting. The age of basic and acidic plutonism in the Everest-Kharta area is evidence that the Bhimphedian Orogeny was still active as late as the Late Ordovician.

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Journal of Asian Earth Sciences

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2037-12-31
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