Abstract

This paper presents detailed SHRIMP zircon U–Pb chronology, major and trace element, and Sr–Nd–Hf isotope geochemistry of three intrusive plagiogranite bodies formed in an island arc setting within the Oytag ophiolite suite of the Oytag–Kuda Suture Zone. SHRIMP zircon U–Pb dating of two of these intrusions shows that they were emplaced into the Oytag volcanic rocks at 337.5 ± 4.1 Ma and 327.7 ± 4.9 Ma, and that the younger intrusion contains inherited zircons ranging from 435.3 to 480.8 Ma. Both intrusions are composed of low-Al trondhjemite and tonalite. The rocks have low K 2O and Sr and high Y contents with low Sr/Y ratios. They have relatively low rare earth element (REE) concentrations and are depleted in light REE (LREE) and relatively enriched in heavy REE (HREE), with marked negative Eu anomalies in the chondrite-normalized REE patterns. They have initial 87Sr/ 86Sr ratios of 0.7048 to 0.7068 and ε Nd (T) values of 6.2 to 7.6, which are lower than those of typical MORB. In situ Hf isotopic compositions of zircons with Early Carboniferous age from both intrusions are characterized by positive initial ε Hf values, ranging from + 12.5 to + 19.5, similar to typical MORB. The inherited Ordovician zircons in the younger intrusion have initial ε Hf values of − 1.9 to + 3.1, similar to zircons from Ordovician granitoids in the region. Detailed elemental and isotopic data suggest that the Oytag plagiogranites were formed in an oceanic island arc setting, by differentiation of arc tholeiitic magmas that formed in response to the intra-oceanic subduction. The inherited zircons are interpreted as the xenocrysts captured from the incipient oceanic crust that contains relicts of discrete fragments of continental crust with Ordovician zircons, through which the plagiogranite was emplaced. The Oytag ophiolite suite might be the remnants of an ancient island arc, the basement of which was the incipient oceanic crust. The Oytag–Kuda Suture Zone is suggested to be a multiple suture zone that represents the remnants of both the Proto-Tethyan and Paleo-Tethyan oceans. The western Kunlun orogen was therefore not a long-lived active continental margin during the early and late Paleozoic times. It most likely underwent at least two orogenic cycles and thus might represent a multiple orogenic belt.

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