Minerals (Jan 2022)

From Middle Neoproterozoic Extension to Paleozoic Accretion and Collision of the Eastern Tiklik Belt (the Western Kunlun Orogen, NW China)

  • Miao Sang,
  • Wenjiao Xiao,
  • Brian F. Windley,
  • Qigui Mao,
  • Zhiyong Zhang,
  • Hao Wang,
  • He Yang,
  • Songjian Ao,
  • Dongfang Song,
  • Jingmin Gan,
  • Zhixin Zhang,
  • Liang Li

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/min12020166
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 2
p. 166

Abstract

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The eastern Tiklik belt is mainly composed of meta-sedimentary rocks of the Ailiankate and Sailajiazitage Groups that were previously interpreted as Palaeoproterozoic, Mesoproterozic and Neoproterozoic stratigraphic units, which are part of the Tarim Precambrian basement. Our new detrital (U-Pb) zircon ages yield a dominant single peak with a major range between ca. 700 Ma and 800 Ma for meta-sedimentary rocks from both the Ailiankate and Sailajiazitage Groups, which demonstrates that they were mainly derived from an independent Neoproterozoic terrane. There are several ages of 444–659 Ma, of which, the youngest has an age of 444 ± 6 Ma, indicating that the time of deposition of the meta-sedimentary rocks could have been in the Early Silurian. The porphyritic granite sample has a weighted mean crystallization age of 442 ± 2 Ma. The adakite-like geochemical characteristics of the porphytitic granite suggest derivation from the melting of the oceanic slab and formation in a subduction, arc-related tectonic setting. After integration with relevant published data, our work suggests that the Ailiankate and Sailajiazitage Groups belong to a tectonic mosaic that contains Middle Neoproterozoic extensional and Paleozoic accretionary and collisional complexes, rather than the Paleoproterozoic or Mesoproterozoic basement, as previously regarded. We propose a new tectonic model for the eastern Tiklik belt that started with a Middle Neoproterozoic extension and ended with Paleozoic continuous accretion and collision in a Paleo-Tethys archipelago, which contributed to the considerable continental growth of the southern Tarim Block.

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