Abstract

AbstractThe South Tianshan Orogenic Belt marks the final assembly of the southern Altaids and the Karakum-Tarim Cratons. Integrated petrological, geochemical, and geochronological studies were carried out on the Akeyazi high-alumina basaltic lavas (HABs) and their host sandstones from the southern margin of the Central Tianshan Block. Given their relative high alumina contents (Al2O3 > 16 wt%) and geochemical similarity to basalts from modern arcs (e.g., Aleutian, Kamchatka, Izu, and Honshu arc), the Akeyazi basaltic lavas are classified as HABs. The Akeyazi HABs are distinguished by strong enrichment in large ion lithophile elements (LILE) and negative Nb-Ta anomalies. Furthermore, their mid-oceanic ridge basalt (MORB)-like Sr-Nd-Hf (87Sr/86Sr(i) ~0.705766, εNd(t) ~+2.5, εHf(t) ~+9.5), along with arc-like trace element patterns, indicate a petrogenesis derived from a mantle wedge metasomatized by pelagic, sediment-derived melts (2%–5% melts mixed, as confirmed by melt modeling). Zircon U-Pb ages of Akeyazi HABs and associated arc-related gabbros suggest that they were mainly erupted during ca. 415 Ma. Moreover, host sandstones of Akeyazi HABs exhibit a unimodal distribution with a peak at 480–410 Ma in the detrital zircon spectrum, which is notably distinct from those of the Central Tianshan Block, South Tianshan Accretionary Complex, and North Tarim Craton, each of which is multimodal. The maximum depositional age (MDA) of the meta-sandstones is 351.0 ± 4.3 Ma, with the weighted average of three oldest Paleozoic grains at 502 ± 26 Ma. Collectively, our data, for the first time, discloses an intra-oceanic arc setting from ca. 502–351 Ma during the northward subduction of the South Tianshan Ocean, which further reveals the history of multiple episodes of accretion in the southern Altaids.

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