Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems (Feb 2020)

Carbonated Inheritance in the Eastern Tibetan Lithospheric Mantle: Petrological Evidences and Geodynamic Implications

  • Fanny Goussin,
  • Nicolas Riel,
  • Carole Cordier,
  • Stéphane Guillot,
  • Philippe Boulvais,
  • Pierrick Roperch,
  • Anne Replumaz,
  • Karel Schulmann,
  • Guillaume Dupont‐Nivet,
  • Filipe Rosas,
  • Zhaojie Guo

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1029/2019GC008495
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 21, no. 2
pp. n/a – n/a

Abstract

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Abstract The timing and mechanism of formation of the Tibet Plateau remain elusive, and even the present‐day structure of the Tibetan lithosphere is hardly resolved, due to conflicting interpretations of the geophysical data. We show here that significant advances in our understanding of this orogeny could be achieved through a better assessment of the composition and rheological properties of the deepest parts of the Tibetan lithosphere, leading in particular to a reinterpretation of the global tomographic cross sections. We report mantle phlogopite xenocrysts and carbonate‐bearing ultramafic cumulates preserved in Eocene potassic rocks from the Eastern Qiangtang terrane, which provide evidence that the lithospheric mantle in Central Tibet was enriched in H 2O and CO 2 prior to the India‐Asia collision. Rheological calculations and numerical modeling suggest that (1) such metasomatized mantle would have been significantly weaker than a normal mantle but buoyant enough to prevent its sinking into the deep mantle; (2) the slow seismic anomalies beneath Central Tibet may image a weakened lithosphere of normal thickness rather than a lithosphere thinned and heated by the convective removal of its lower part; and (3) melting of such soft and fusible metasomatized mantle would have been possible during intracontinental subduction, supporting a subduction origin for the studied Eocene potassic magmatism. These results demonstrate that the inheritance a soft and buoyant precollisional Tibetan lithosphere may have conditioned the growth and the present‐day structure of the Tibet Plateau.

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