Abstract

The Carboniferous tectonic history of the northern West Junggar of NW China is of key importance for understanding the tectonics of the Altaids. This paper presents a systematic study of the emplacement of the E'min ophiolite, the ages of turbidites, and a stitching granite dike in order to constrain the late Carboniferous oceanic evolution of northern West Junggar. Our field investigation reveals that the Tarbagatay subduction–accretion complex formed by imbrication of turbidites and ophiolitic slices in the Western Tarbagatay Mountain, which is considered as the forearc of the Saur arc in northern West Junggar. Field relationships and zircon geochronology suggest that the emplacement of the E'min ophiolite was later than the minimum time of deposition of hanging wall turbidites, which have a zircon age of 324 Ma, and must be earlier than the crystallization time of a 311‐Ma stitching granite dike that intruded the younger turbidites. The turbidites become younger from north to south, with minimum deposition ages varying from 324 to 309 Ma. The 311‐Ma dike has an adakitic affinity suggesting that it may have formed by magma melted from a subduction slab wedge and from accreted material at ~310 Ma. Therefore, we propose an accretionary arc setting for the Saur arc, with southward migration of the trench and magma front. The 311‐Ma dike has a high Al enrichment and arc‐related geochemical signature suggesting that it was generated by melting of accreted trench sediments. This may indicate that subduction of the Saur arc may have lasted to at least the late Carboniferous. The development of such arc accretion suggests that the formation of the southern Altaids was fundamentally similar to that of accretionary orogens in the western Pacific.

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