Abstract

An intraoceanic Trans-Tethyan subduction zone has been identified in both the Kohistan-Ladakh arc and the West Burma Terrane. This has significant implications for the India-Eurasia collision. Concurrently, the dismembered ophiolites within the Yarlung-Tsangpo Suture Zone likely originated from the intraoceanic Trans-Tethyan subduction zone or the Andean-type southern Eurasian continental margin. A paleomagnetic study was conducted on the Lower Cretaceous (∼120–130 Ma) mafic dykes in the Xiugugabu ophiolite to resolve the uncertainty of its origin. The characteristic remanent magnetization (ChRM) obtained through stepwise thermal demagnetization successfully passed consistency/fold and reversal tests. After tilt correction, the overall mean direction of the ChRM was D = 296.9°, I = −25.5°, k = 47.6, α95 = 4.5°, and N = 22, indicating a paleolatitude of 13.4°N/S and a paleopole at 15.0° N, 326.6°E with A95 = 3.8°. Compared with previous paleomagnetic data from the Trans-Tethyan subduction zone, our findings strongly support the involvement of the Xiugugabu ophiolite in the intraoceanic Trans-Tethyan subduction zone. This finding reinforces the hypothesis that there were two distinct subduction zones in the Neotethyan Ocean during the Early Cretaceous. One subduction zone was situated on the southern margin of the Gangdese Arc. The second was the intraoceanic subduction zone, located approximately 3500 km from the southern margin of Eurasia, in the southern hemisphere. Our results also support a multistage India–Eurasia collision process involving continental plates, intraoceanic arcs, and terranes within the Neo-Tethyan Ocean.

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