Abstract

The Shyok Suture Zone of the Ladakh palaeovolcanic arc is made of Cretaceous volcanosedimentary formations intruded by granodioritic plutons. Field observations show a tectonic stacking of litho-units from different volcanic arc and back-arc environments. In the western part (Skardu area), the Shyok Suture Zone can be subdivided into two groups: (1) The Northern Group, which consists of olistolith basaltic blocks and tuffs. The basalts are LREE depleted with a LILE enrichment and a slight Nb depletion suggesting a back-arc basin origin. (2) The Southern Group, which consists predominantly of andesites that show LREE enrichment, a flat HREE pattern, strong Nb–Ta depletion, and LILE enrichment. The volcanic rocks of the Southern Group appear to have island-arc tholeiite (IAT) to calc-alkaline affinities. In the eastern part of the suture zone (Nubra–Shyok area), Albian to Cenomanian age silicoclastic sediments predominate. These sediments correspond to a large detrital platform built on the northern part of the Ladakh Arc. At the top, these sediments interlayer with basaltic to andesitic lavas. These lavas appear to be more differentiated and calc-alkaline in nature than the Skardu Southern Group lavas, but show similar volcanic arc affinities. No evidence of a back-arc basin was found in this area. Our data from these two areas shows a northwest–southeast evolution, from back-arc to arc formations in northern Ladakh. Opening of this back-arc basin occurred on the northwestern side of the Ladakh Arc. This back-arc was progressively closing eastward. The arc itself was more mature in the east, resembling the southern Tibetan continental arc, and was characterised by more continental sedimentation. Subsequent Himalayan tectonometamorphic evolution, closure of the back-arc basin and deformation along the Shyok Suture, reflects an early asymmetrical geometry along the Asian margin and Kohistan–Ladakh Arc.

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