Abstract

Despite the long history of studying metamorphic rocks in the Sredinny and Ganalsky uplifts of Kamchatka, their tectonic setting and origin, as well as the time of sedimentation, magmatism, and metamorphism, remain a matter of debate and wide discussion. Our isotopic study shows that composite sections of metaterrigenous rocks of the Sredinny and Ganalsky ranges (Kolpakova, Kamchatka, Malka, Kikhchik, and Ganal groups) reveal no significant difference in the Nd isotopic composition, which is evidence for the geochemical similarity of their provenances in contrast to previous conjectures that these groups vary in age from Archean to Upper Cretaceous and were formed in regions distant from one another and distinct in geodynamic setting. New Sm-Nd isotopic data and recent U-Pb (SHRIMP II) timing of zircons allow us to state that the metaterrigenous rocks of the Sredinny and Ganalsky uplifts actually make up a single terrigenous sequence of a great thickness. This sequence accumulated in the Cretaceous shallow-water epicontinental basin, underwent contact metamorphism affected by intrusions varying in age and composition, was involved in zonal regional metamorphism in the early Eocene, and only in the Pliocene was it dismembered into the Sredinny and Ganalsky uplifts as a result of rifting.

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