Abstract

The Chinese Altay orogenic belt formed in the Paleozoic is an important part of the Central Asian Orogenic Belt (CAOB), accompanying with remarkable metamorphism. Its tectono–metamorphic evolution history is still a controversial topic. In this contribution, we investigate the petrography, metamorphic peak P–T conditions and zircon geochronology of the newly discovered garnet–absent metapelitic and felsic gneisses at Wuqiagou area in the southern Chinese Altay. They are characterized by an assemblage of orthopyroxene + biotite + plagioclase + quartz + Fe–Ti oxides ± cordierite ± K–feldspar, in which most K–feldspar grains have transformed into perthites with thin albite lamellae. The Wuqiagou garnet–absent gneisses experienced pervasive partial melting, as testified by microstructures such as mineral pseudomorphs after melt films or pockets. Phase diagram modelling constrains the peak P–T conditions to 3.5–5.5 kbar and 800–900 °C, with possible geothermal gradients of 45–75 °C/km, indicative of a prominent low–pressure granulite–facies metamorphic event in the southern Chinese Altay. SIMS zircon U–Pb dating results show a weighted mean age of 255.8 ± 1.8 Ma. This age is interpreted to represent the timing of this low–pressure granulite facies metamorphism, which is highly coeval with the timing of their hosted mafic granulite lenses (∼255 Ma) and nearby mantle–derived mafic intrusions (∼257 Ma). Based on available petrological, geochemical and chronological data, we propose that the Permian low–pressure granulite–facies metamorphic event in the southern Chinese Altay was likely associated with the intrusions of deep–derived mafic magma at a relatively shallow crustal level (12–18 km) in a post–orogenic extensional setting, with a possible link with the Tarim mantle plume activity.

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