Abstract

Mafic granulites and amphibolites in the Masang Kang area of NW Bhutan Himalaya have been investigated for their geochemical and isotopic characteristics in order to determine their protolith history. Bulk-rock major and trace element geochemistry indicate that the rocks were originally tholeiitic and alkali basalts with minor ultramafics. U–Pb zircon SIMS data suggest an age of 1742 ± 39 Ma for mafic magmatism. The age-corrected ε Nd (1742) values of the rocks are highly variable, ranging from high positive (+ 8.4) to negative (− 3.3). The positive value suggests a primitive magma source, similar to that of rift-related tholeiites. We suggest that the rocks of the Masang Kang suite were produced during a major late Paleoproterozoic thermal event that caused the mobilization and enrichment of the sub-continental lithospheric mantle beneath the north Indian margin. The geochemical signature of these rift-related metabasic rocks may have been produced during an earlier episode of oceanic underplating or subduction from which the fluid required to mobilize and enrich the overlying sub-lithospheric mantle may have been derived. Though their occurrence is rare, Paleoproterozoic igneous rocks within the Greater Himalayan Sequence (GHS), in addition to sources identified throughout the LHS, may have contributed to the detrital zircon population that form the 1.7–1.9 Ga peak in the age spectra of the Lesser Himalayan Sequence (LHS). In addition, the coeval Paleoproterozoic magmatism in both LHS and GHS suggests that the two lithotectonic units may have belonged to the same continental plate at that time period.

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