Abstract

A summary of original Nd isotopic data on granitoids, silicic volcanics, and metasediments of the Baikal Fold Region is presented. The available Nd isotopic data, in combination with new geological and geochronological evidence, allowed recognition of the Early Baikalian (1000 ± 100 to 720 ± 20 Ma) and Late Baikalian (700 ± 10 to 590 ± 5 Ma) tectonic cycles in the geological evolution. The tectonic stacking, deformation, metamorphism, and granite formation are related to orogenic events that occurred 0.80–0.78 Ga and 0.61–0.59 Ga ago. The crust-forming events dated at 1.0–0.8 Ga and 0.70–0.62 Ga pertain to each cycle. The Early Baikalian crust formation developed largely in the relatively narrow and spatially separated Kichera and Param-Shamansky zones of troughs in the Baikal-Muya Belt. The formation and reworking of the Late Baikalian continental crust played the leading role in the Karalon-Mamakan, Yana, and Kater-Uakit zones and in the Svetlinsky Subzone of the Anamakit-Muya Zone in the Baikal-Muya Belt. In general, three large historical periods are recognized in the evolution of the Baikal Fold Region. The Early Baikalian period was characterized by prevalence of reworking of the older continental crust. The Late Baikalian-Early Caledonian period is distinguished by more extensive formation and transformation of the juvenile crust. The third, Late Paleozoic period was marked by reworking of the continental crust with juxtaposition of all older crustal protoliths. Two models of paleogeodynamic evolution of the Baikalian fold complexes are considered: (1) the autochthonous model that corresponds to the formation of suboceanic crust in rift-related basins of the Red Sea type and its subsequent reworking in the course of collision-related squeezing of paleorifts and intertrough basins and (2) the allochthonous model that implies the formation of fragments of the Baikal-Muya Belt at the shelf of the Rodinia supercontinent, their subsequent participation in the evolution of the Paleoasian ocean, and their eventual juxtaposition during Late Baikalian and Early Caledonian events in the structure of the Caledonian Siberian Superterrane of the Central Asian Foldbelt.

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