Abstract

The Gangdese magmatic belt in southern Tibet demarcates an important boundary between the Indian and Eurasian plates. Due to its location and magmatic evolutionary history, it is key to understanding both the history of Neotethys closure and the Indo–Asian collisional process. This study presents new geochronological and geochemical data for dioritic dykes in the southern Gangdese magmatic belt in southern Tibet. U-Pb geochronological results reveal that the dykes were emplaced at ca. 41Ma and thus broadly coeval with the 40–38Ma Dazi volcanics and the 42–40Ma Gaoligong–Tengliang basaltic dykes. Geochemically, these dykes are characterized by alkaline signature, high Mg# (57–63) and low TiO2 contents (~0.9–1.0), showing notable enrichment of light rare earth elements relative to the heavy rare earth elements, enrichment of incompatible elements (i.e. Cs, Rb, Ba, Th and U), and depletion of high field strength elements (i.e. Nb, Ta and Ti). In addition, a large variation of zircon εHf(t) values (−10 to +13) was shown, implying heterogeneity of magma sources. A heterogeneous source is also suggested by the occurrence of xenocrysts in the dykes. These observations suggest that the magma source of the dykes was dominated by partial melting of lithospheric mantle and then subsequently contaminated by crustal material during ascent. In combination with other geological data in the region, we suspect that the slab slicing of the Neotethys played a key role in the formation of the lithospheric mantle-derived dioritic dykes and adakitic granite, asthenosphere-derived volcanics, basaltic dykes, as well as the recently reported strongly fractionated granites.

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