Abstract

The Central Asian Orogenic Belt was characterized by a long-lived accretionary history from Neoproterozoic to Paleozoic, followed by a collisional phase of orogeny in the latest Paleozoic with the closure of the Paleo-Asian Ocean. However, Ni-Cu sulfide mineralization associated with mantle-derived mafic magmas in the Central Asian Orogenic Belt was relatively short-lived. Thus, the coherence between the protracted accretionary and collisional history of the Central Asian Orogenic Belt and the transient Ni-Cu sulfide-bearing mafic magmatism is difficult to understand. We investigated both Ni-Cu sulfide-bearing and sulfide-barren mafic intrusions along a major suture zone of the Irtysh Shear Zone within the Central Asian Orogenic Belt to understand the origin of short-lived Ni-Cu sulfide mineralization in the context of the collision of two arc systems of the Chinese Altai and the East Junggar regions. Zircon U-Pb dating results for the Ni-Cu sulfide-bearing mafic intrusions show that they were only emplaced briefly from 290 Ma to 280 Ma after subduction terminated (ca. 312 Ma), substantially earlier than Ni-Cu sulfide-barren mafic intrusions (ca. 274−271 Ma). Zircons from all Ni-Cu sulfide-bearing/barren mafic intrusions yield arithmetic mean δ18O values ranging from 6.0 to 7.4‰, higher than the typical mantle value (∼5.3‰), which indicates their derivation from a metasomatized mantle with inherited subduction signatures. The δ11B values of the rocks from these intrusions range from −17.2‰ to −2.3‰, significantly lower than those of typical volcanic arcs (up to +18‰), which suggests that the metasomatic components in the mantle source were dominated by sediment melts rather than fluids. The pressure calculated using amphibole thermobarometry shows that the parental magmas of the Ni-Cu sulfide-bearing mafic intrusions were emplaced shallower than those of Ni-Cu sulfide-barren mafic intrusions. This is supported by the fact that the country rocks of the Ni-Cu sulfide-bearing mafic intrusions are shallow crustal lithologies of sedimentary rocks, whereas the country rocks of the barren intrusions are relatively deeper crustal lithologies of high-grade metamorphic rocks and granites. Olivine from the Ni-Cu sulfide-barren intrusions has forsterite (Fo) contents ranging from 51.1 mol% to 76.2 mol% and Ni from 196 ppm to 1312 ppm. These values are much lower than those of the Ni-Cu sulfide-bearing intrusions (Fo = 72.6−79.4 mol%; Ni = 1022−1925 ppm), which indicates that the parental magmas of the barren intrusions may have experienced extensive olivine crystallization. Notably, the emplacement of the Ni-Cu sulfide-bearing mafic intrusions (290−280 Ma) coincidently overlapped with a transient period of orogen-parallel extension (ca. 295−280 Ma) in response to the collision of the Chinese Altai and East Junggar. Syn-collisional extension may lead to the rapid ascent and emplacement of mantle-derived mafic magmas at a shallower crustal level, preventing significant loss of Ni from olivine crystallization at depths, and thus providing metal-rich mafic magmas for potential Ni-Cu sulfide mineralization. Our results highlight that syn-collisional extension is an essential geodynamic mechanism that controls the emplacement of Ni-Cu sulfide-bearing mafic intrusions in orogenic belts.

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