During Carboniferous time,tremendous juvenile arc crust was formed in the southern Central Asian Orogenic Belt(CAOB),although its origin remains unclear.Herein,we presented zircon U-Pb-Hf and whole-rock geochemical an...During Carboniferous time,tremendous juvenile arc crust was formed in the southern Central Asian Orogenic Belt(CAOB),although its origin remains unclear.Herein,we presented zircon U-Pb-Hf and whole-rock geochemical and Sr-Nd isotopic data for a suite of volcanic and pyroclastic rocks from the Khan-Bogd area in southern Mongolia.These Carboniferous pyroclastic rocks generally have some early Paleozoic zircons,probably derived from the granitic and sedimentary rocks of the Lake Zone and the Gobi-Altai Zone to the north,indicative of a continental arc nature.In addition,they have a main zircon U-Pb age of ca.370–330 Ma,positive Hf and Nd isotopes,and mafic-intermediate arc affinity,similar to the coeval arc magmatism.Moreover,the pyroclastic rocks of the northern area have more mafic and older volcanic components with depositional time(ca.350–370 Ma;Visean and Bashkirian stages)earlier than that in the southern area(mainly ca.350–315 Ma;Serpukhovian and Bashkirian stages).Combining a preexisting northward subduction supported by the available magnetotelluric data with a slab rollback model of the main oceanic basin of the Paleo-Asian Ocean(PAO)during Carboniferous and Triassic times,we infer that the Carboniferous arc magmatism was probably derived from a backarc ocean triggered by slab rollback.Thus,the juvenile arc volcanism of Mongolia,together with other areas(e.g.,Junggar)in the southern CAOB,represented a significant lateral accretion that terminated after the Carboniferous due to a significant contraction of the PAO.展开更多
基金financially supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China(42102260,42172236,42072264,41902229,and 42072267)Hong Kong Research Grants Council General Research Fund(17307918)+1 种基金the Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities,Chang’an University,China(300102272204)Opening Foundation of State Key Laboratory of Continental Dynamics,Northwest University,China(21LCD09)。
文摘During Carboniferous time,tremendous juvenile arc crust was formed in the southern Central Asian Orogenic Belt(CAOB),although its origin remains unclear.Herein,we presented zircon U-Pb-Hf and whole-rock geochemical and Sr-Nd isotopic data for a suite of volcanic and pyroclastic rocks from the Khan-Bogd area in southern Mongolia.These Carboniferous pyroclastic rocks generally have some early Paleozoic zircons,probably derived from the granitic and sedimentary rocks of the Lake Zone and the Gobi-Altai Zone to the north,indicative of a continental arc nature.In addition,they have a main zircon U-Pb age of ca.370–330 Ma,positive Hf and Nd isotopes,and mafic-intermediate arc affinity,similar to the coeval arc magmatism.Moreover,the pyroclastic rocks of the northern area have more mafic and older volcanic components with depositional time(ca.350–370 Ma;Visean and Bashkirian stages)earlier than that in the southern area(mainly ca.350–315 Ma;Serpukhovian and Bashkirian stages).Combining a preexisting northward subduction supported by the available magnetotelluric data with a slab rollback model of the main oceanic basin of the Paleo-Asian Ocean(PAO)during Carboniferous and Triassic times,we infer that the Carboniferous arc magmatism was probably derived from a backarc ocean triggered by slab rollback.Thus,the juvenile arc volcanism of Mongolia,together with other areas(e.g.,Junggar)in the southern CAOB,represented a significant lateral accretion that terminated after the Carboniferous due to a significant contraction of the PAO.