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American Journal of Science | 2010

Paleozoic multiple accretionary and collisional processes of the Beishan orogenic collage

Wenjiao Xiao; Qigui Mao; Brian F. Windley; Chunming Han; Junfeng Qu; Ji'en Zhang; Songjian Ao; Qianqian Guo; Nathan Cleven; Shoufa Lin; Yehua Shan; Jiabao Li

The Beishan orogenic collage is located in the southernmost part of the Altaids, and connects the Southern Tien Shan suture to the west with the Solonker suture to the east. The orogen was previously regarded as early Paleozoic in age in contrast to the surrounding southern Altaid collages, which are Late Paleozoic or even Early Mesozoic. This paper reviews the tectonic units of the Beishan orogen, which along a north-south traverse consists of several arcs and ophiolitic mélanges. These tectonic units were thrust imbricated and overprinted by strike-slip faulting during Permian-Triassic times, and the youngest strata involved in the deformation are Permian. Stitching plutons are Late Permian in age. Peaks of magmatic-metamorphic-tectonic activity, and paleomagnetic and paleogeographic data indicate that the Beishan orogenic collage evolved by development of several, Early to Mid-Paleozoic arcs in different parts of the Paleoasian Ocean. The Late Paleozoic collage is characterized by three active continental margins or island arcs that are separated by two ophiolitic mélanges. The northernmost active margin is represented by the Queershan arc, which may have lasted until the Permian. The Shibanshan unit is the southernmost, subduction-related continental arc along the northern margin of the Dunhuang block. In the Late Carboniferous to Permian the eastern end (promontory) of the Tarim Craton probably collided with the Chinese eastern Tien Shan arc, forming a new active continental margin, which interacted with the Beishan Late Paleozoic archipelago, generating a complicated subduction-accretionary orogen; this is suggested to be one of the last phases in the development of the long-lived Altaid accretionary orogenesis. The new model for this orogen bridges the gap between the western and eastern ends of the southern Altaids. The modern Timor-Australia collision zone with its many surrounding arcs is an appropriate analog for the Altaids in the Late Paleozoic.


Geological Magazine | 2012

The Liuyuan complex in the Beishan, NW China: a Carboniferous–Permian ophiolitic fore-arc sliver in the southern Altaids

Qigui Mao; Wenjiao Xiao; Brian F. Windley; Chunming Han; Junfeng Qu; Songjian Ao; Ji'en Zhang; Qianqian Guo

The tectonic history and time of closure of the Palaeo-Asian ocean of the Altaids are issues of lively current debate. To address these issues, this paper presents detailed geological, petrological and geochemical data of the Liuyuan complex (LC) in the Beishan region in NW China, located in the southernmost Altaids, in order to constrain its age, origin and tectonic setting. The LC mainly comprises massive basalts, pillow basalts, basaltic breccias, gabbros and ultramafic rocks together with cherts and tuffs. Most prominent are gabbros and large volumes of basaltic lavas. These mafic rocks have high TiO 2 contents, flat rare earth element (REE) patterns and show high-field-strength elements (HFSEs) similar to those of mid-ocean ridge basalts (MORB). The mafic rocks exhibit positive e Nd(t) (6.6–9.0) values, representing magmas derived from the mantle. But these basic rocks are also enriched in Th relative to REEs, and are systematically depleted in Nb–Ta–(Ti) relative to REEs. There is also a large range in initial 87 Sr/ 86 Sr (0.7037–0.7093). All these variables indicate that mantle-derived magma was contaminated by fluids and/or melts from a subducting lithospheric slab, and formed in a supra-subduction zone (SSZ) setting. A gabbro intruded in the complex was dated by LA-ICP-MS on 20 zircons that yielded a 206 Pb– 238 U weighted average age of 286 ± 2 Ma. Considering the fact that all these basalts are imbricated against Permian tuffaceous sediments and limestone, we propose that the LC formed as an ophiolite in a fore-arc in Carboniferous–Permian time. This indicates that the Palaeo-Asian ocean still existed at 286 ± 2 Ma in early Permian time, and thus the time of closure of the Palaeo-Asian ocean was in or after the late Permian.


Geological Magazine | 2012

Cambrian to early Silurian ophiolite and accretionary processes in the Beishan collage, NW China: implications for the architecture of the Southern Altaids

Songjian Ao; Wenjiao Xiao; Chunming Han; Xian-Hua Li; Junfeng Qu; Ji'en Zhang; Qianqian Guo; Zhonghua Tian

The mechanism of continental growth of the Altaids is currently under debate between models invoking continuous subduction-accretion or punctuated accretion by closure of multiple ocean basins. We use the Yueyashan-Xichangjing ophiolite belt of the Beishan collage (southern Altaids) to constrain the earliest oceanic crust in the southern Palaeo-Asian Ocean. Five lithotectonic units were identified from S to N: the Huaniushan block, a sedimentary passive margin, the structurally incoherent Yueyashan-Xichangjing ophiolite complex, a coherent sedimentary package and the Mazongshan island arc with granitic rocks. We present a structural analysis of the accretionary complex, which is composed of the incoherent ophiolitic melange and coherent sedimentary rocks, to work out the tectonic polarity. A new weighted mean 206 Pb- 238 U age of 533 ± 1.7 Ma from a plagiogranite in the Yueyashan-Xichangjing ophiolite indicates that the ocean floor formed in early Cambrian time. Furthermore, we present new geochemical data to constrain the tectonic setting of the Yueyashan- Xichangjing ophiolite. The Yueyashan-Xichangjing ophiolite was emplaced as a result of northward subduction of an oceanic plate beneath the Mazongshan island arc to the north in late Ordovician to early Silurian time. Together with data from the literature, our work demonstrates that multiple overlapping periods of accretion existed in the Palaeozoic in the northern and southern Altaids. Therefore, a model of multiple accretion by closure of several ocean basins is most viable.


Scientific Reports | 2016

Linking magmatism with collision in an accretionary orogen

Shan Li; Sun-Lin Chung; Simon A. Wilde; Tao Wang; Wenjiao Xiao; Qianqian Guo

A compilation of U-Pb age, geochemical and isotopic data for granitoid plutons in the southern Central Asian Orogenic Belt (CAOB), enables evaluation of the interaction between magmatism and orogenesis in the context of Paleo-Asian oceanic closure and continental amalgamation. These constraints, in conjunction with other geological evidence, indicate that following consumption of the ocean, collision-related calc-alkaline granitoid and mafic magmatism occurred from 255 ± 2 Ma to 251 ± 2 Ma along the Solonker-Xar Moron suture zone. The linear or belt distribution of end-Permian magmatism is interpreted to have taken place in a setting of final orogenic contraction and weak crustal thickening, probably as a result of slab break-off. Crustal anatexis slightly post-dated the early phase of collision, producing adakite-like granitoids with some S-type granites during the Early-Middle Triassic (ca. 251–245 Ma). Between 235 and 220 Ma, the local tectonic regime switched from compression to extension, most likely caused by regional lithospheric extension and orogenic collapse. Collision-related magmatism from the southern CAOB is thus a prime example of the minor, yet tell-tale linking of magmatism with orogenic contraction and collision in an archipelago-type accretionary orogen.


Journal of Geophysical Research | 2017

Early‐Middle Triassic high Sr/Y granitoids in the southern Central Asian Orogenic Belt: Implications for ocean closure in accretionary orogens

Shan Li; Sun-Lin Chung; Simon A. Wilde; Bor-ming Jahn; Wenjiao Xiao; Tao Wang; Qianqian Guo

The key to defining the termination of accretion in an accretionary orogen is to recognize the initial magmatic processes that are generated at the time of ocean closure. We present new age, geochemical, and isotopic data for magmatic rocks related to terminal collision along the Solonker-Xar Moron suture zone in the southern Central Asian Orogenic Belt (CAOB) that record such processes following closure of the Paleo-Asian Ocean. These magmatic rocks were emplaced in the Early-Middle Triassic (251–245 Ma) and show high Sr/Y signatures. Their low MgO, Cr, and Ni contents and variable whole-rock eNd(t) values (+5.8 to −5.3), together with the range in zircon eHf(t) (+15.6 to −9.8) and δ18O values (5.1 to 7.9‰), indicate an origin from partial melting of juvenile lower crustal rocks with some old components, including supracrustal recycling under garnet amphibolite facies conditions. Our data, along with available geological and geophysical evidence, lead us to propose a model of final oceanic contraction in the southern CAOB, resulting in sublinear distribution of high Sr/Y melts along the resultant collision zone, thus defining the onset of postaccretionary processes in the southern CAOB. The identification of collision-related high Sr/Y granitoids from the southern CAOB not only reveals the magmatic process in response to the final episode of orogenic evolution in the CAOB accretionary collision zone but also constrains how and when an archipelago-type accretionary orogen is terminated.


Gondwana Research | 2011

Kinematics and age constraints of deformation in a Late Carboniferous accretionary complex in Western Junggar, NW China

Ji'en Zhang; Wenjiao Xiao; Chunming Han; Songjian Ao; Chao Yuan; Min Sun; Hongyan Geng; Guochun Zhao; Qianqian Guo; Chong Ma


Lithos | 2011

A Devonian to Carboniferous intra-oceanic subduction system in Western Junggar, NW China

Ji'en Zhang; Wenjiao Xiao; Chunming Han; Qigui Mao; Songjian Ao; Qianqian Guo; Chong Ma


Precambrian Research | 2013

Progressive accretionary tectonics of the Beishan orogenic collage, southern Altaids: Insights from zircon U-Pb and Hf isotopic data of high-grade complexes

Dongfang Song; Wenjiao Xiao; Chunming Han; Jiliang Li; Junfeng Qu; Qianqian Guo; Lina Lin; Zhongmei Wang


Journal of Asian Earth Sciences | 2012

Provenance and tectonic settings of Permian turbidites from the Beishan Mountains, NW China: Implications for the Late Paleozoic accretionary tectonics of the southern Altaids

Qianqian Guo; Wenjiao Xiao; Brian F. Windley; Qigui Mao; Chunming Han; Junfeng Qu; Songjian Ao; Jiliang Li; Dongfang Song; Yong Yong


Lithos | 2012

Geochronology, petrogenesis and tectonic implications of Triassic granitoids from Beishan, NW China

Shan Li; Tao Wang; Simon A. Wilde; Ying Tong; Dawei Hong; Qianqian Guo

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Wenjiao Xiao

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Chunming Han

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Shan Li

National Taiwan University

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Sun-Lin Chung

National Taiwan University

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Songjian Ao

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Ji'en Zhang

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Junfeng Qu

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Qigui Mao

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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