Abstract

Abstract In modern plate tectonic regimes, continental crust is generated above subduction zones in magmatic island arcs. Models for continental growth—largely based on the modeling of geochemical processes that can transform mantle melts into the intermediate composition of bulk continental crust—have been hampered by a lack of definitive geochronology, which could clarify the temporal emplacement of igneous rocks at the base of island arc crust. The Kohistan Arc Complex (KAC) of Pakistan is a rare window into a nearly complete section of lower arc crust, revealing a sequence of igneous rocks representing discrete batches of magma underplated along the base of the arc crust. We present high-precision isotope dilution–thermal ionization mass spectrometry U-Pb geochronological data from zircon, and Lu-Hf and Sm-Nd isochron data from several mafic lower crustal cumulates within the KAC. These data establish a clear downward-younging age trend throughout this succession of cumulate complexes, demonstrating a total magmatic duration of ~20 m.y., corresponding to a rate of lower crust formation of up to 200–260 km3 km–1 Ma–1. These results provide the first direct evidence of a sequential process of underplating, revealing a fundamental mechanism responsible for building the root of island arc crust.

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