Geosystems and Geoenvironment (Aug 2023)
Detrital zircon U–Pb geochronology and fluvial basin evolution of the Liuqu Conglomerate within the Yarlung Zangbo Suture Zone: A critical geochronometer for the collision tectonics of the Tibetan-Himalayan Orogenic Belt
Abstract
We present new U-Pb detrital zircon ages, depositional history and tectonic model for the Liuqu Conglomerate (LQC) in southern Tibet that represents a critical geochronometer for the collision history of the Tibetan-Himalayan Orogenic Belt. LQC is a ∼5 km–thick, late Mesozoic–Cenozoic molasse deposit occurring strictly within the Yarlung Zangbo Suture Zone (YZSZ) and is tectonically overlain to the north by the Cretaceous Xigaze ophiolite and to the south by the Mesozoic Tethyan Himalaya sequence. It consists of matrix- and clast-supported conglomerates with sandstone intercalations, and its matrix includes poorly to moderately sorted sandstone and mudstone. New U–Pb detrital zircon dating of LQC sandstones has revealed a youngest zircon age of 307 ± 13 Ma and an oldest zircon age of 3362 ± 51 Ma. The age spectrum of zircons displays a prominent peak of ∼935 Ma, two large peaks at ∼516 Ma and 1474 Ma, and two small clusters of ∼2429 Ma and ∼2772 Ma that point to East Gondwana as the likely provenance for the LQC depocenter. The LQC represents fluvial deposits of an axial river system, which developed in an orogen-parallel, transtensional accommodation space within the YZSZ, after the collision of the Late Jurassic-Early Cretaceous Trans–Tethyan arc–trench system with the northern edge of India in the latest Cretaceous. The Indian subcontinent with the accreted Tethyan ophiolites and the intra–suture LQC depocenter arrived at and collided with the active margin of Eurasia during the latest Oligocene (∼23 Ma). The LQC depocenter started receiving clastic material and zircons for the first time from the Gangdese Magmatic Belt and the Xigaze forearc basin to the north by ∼20 Ma. The ensuing continent–continent collision resulted in significant crustal uplift across the collision zone, and in the inversion and rapid exhumation of the LQC strata by the early–Middle Miocene. The depositional and exhumation history of the fluvial LQC formation within the YZSZ involved two discrete collision events during the evolution of the Tibetan-Himalayan Orogenic system.