Abstract

E. Garzanti, D. Sciunnach & M. Gaetani write: In their recent paper, Corfield et al . (2005) attempted a subsidence analysis of the northwestern Tethys Himalaya stratigraphic succession, and discussed specifically the implications for the obduction of a section of oceanic lithosphere (Spontang Ophiolite) on top of the Indian passive continental margin (Zanskar Shelf). The emplacement age of the Spontang Ophiolite represents a crucial problem in Himalayan geology, which has been lively debated for two decades (e.g., Searle 1986; Kelemen et al. 1988; Garzanti et al . 1987; Guillot et al . 2003). In a series of papers, Mike Searle and co-workers have long proposed and supported the idea that the Spontang Ophiolite was obducted in the Late Cretaceous, making implicit or explicit correlation with the well-studied Semail Ophiolite of Oman (e.g, Searle 1983; 1986; Pedersen et al . 2001; Corfield et al . 2001, 2005). Semail and Spontang, however, are two very different ophiolite complexes. The Semail crust has a supra-subduction geochemical signature and was generated in the mid-Cretaceous (Searle & Cox 1999). Instead, the Spontang basalts have a MORB-like signature and were generated in the mid-Jurassic (Pedersen et al . 2001), similar rather to the other Oman ophiolite exposed on Masirah Island (Gnos et al . 1997). The analogy with the Semail Ophiolite obduction, associated with Late Cretaceous nappe stacking and high-pressure metamorphism of the underthrusted Arabian margin (Searle & Cox 1999), led Searle (2001) to reject the geochronological evidence for the Eocene age of high-pressure metamorphism of Indian-margin rocks (Kaghan and Tso–Morari eclogites; Tonarini et al . 1993; De Sigoyer et al . 2000). Because of the Eocene age of the eclogites, and of the fact that the Spontang Ophiolite lies tectonically on top of Indian margin sediments as …

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