Abstract
Linear or lens-like carbonate (marble) and carbonate-silicate bodies among gabbro and amphibolites within the Krestovsky subterrane of the Olkhon composite terrane (West Baikal Area) are identified as dikes. The dikes commonly dip almost vertically, range in thickness from 20 cm to a few meters, and are up to 100 m long. The Olkhon marble dikes quite often coexist with dolerite dikes and/or granite veins and show signatures of emplacement synchronously with the igneous bodies. The marble dikes differ from mantle carbonatites in mineralogy and chemistry and thus may be derived from sedimentary carbonate rocks molten during collisional events. The origin of the Olkhon carbonate and carbonate-silicate dikes may be explained with two possible geodynamic scenarios. They may be derived either from Neoproterozoic carbonate sediments upon the Early Precambrian basement of a cratonic block which was involved in collisional events, or from abundant carbonate sedimentary material in an island-arc terrane. Large-scale melting of silicate and carbonate rocks was maintained by heat released from mantle mafic magma intruding into the lower crust. The batches of both crustal (carbonate and granitic) and mantle (mafic) melts intruded late during the collision in a strike-slip tectonic setting.
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