The Chilas Mafic-Ultramafic Igneous Complex; The root of the Kohistan Island Arc in the Himalaya of northern Pakistan

Author(s):  
M. Asif Khan ◽  
M. Qasim Jan ◽  
Brian F. Windley ◽  
John Tarney ◽  
Matthew F. Thirlwall
1996 ◽  
Vol 102 (9) ◽  
pp. XXIII-XXVI
Author(s):  
Takashi Nakajima ◽  
Sakae Sano ◽  
Teruo Shirahase

Author(s):  
Masumi U. Mikoshiba ◽  
Yutaka Takahashi ◽  
Yuhei Takahashi ◽  
Allah Bakhsh Kausar ◽  
Tahseenullah Khan ◽  
...  

1982 ◽  
Vol 19 (3) ◽  
pp. 490-503 ◽  
Author(s):  
Brenna E. Lorenz ◽  
John C. Fountain

The South Lake Igneous Complex, located south of Notre Dame Bay in the Exploits Zone of central Newfoundland, consists of ophiolitic (layered gabbro and sheeted dike) fragments intruded by a quartz–hornblende diorite and a later tonalite. All units are cut by swarms of basalt dikes. The sheeted dikes of the ophiolitic fragments are depleted in incompatible elements relative to mid-ocean ridge basalts, but to a lesser degree than the depleted lavas of the Bett's Cove Ophiolite in the Notre Dame Bay Zone to the west, and are interpreted as being components of oceanic crust formed in a back-arc basin. The intruding plutonic phases are rich in hydrous minerals and are severely depleted in incompatible elements, and are considered to be related to the formation of an island-arc volcanic pile upon the ophiolitic basement, with the rising magmas massively intruding and disrupting the basement rocks. The late dikes are enriched in incompatible elements and have a transitional tholeiitic–alkalic character. How much younger these dikes are than the rocks they intrude is unknown. Assuming that they are similar in age, an origin of these basalts from a subducted oceanic ridge is speculated.


The Himalaya, the Karakoram and Tibet were assembled by the successive accretion to Asia of continental and arc terranes during the Mesozoic and early Tertiary. The Jinsha and Banggong Sutures in Tibet join continental terranes separated from Gondwana. Ophiolites were obducted onto the shelf of southern Tibet in the Jurassic before the formation of the Banggong Suture. The Kohistan—Ladakh Terrane contains an island arc that was accreted in the late Cretaceous on the Shyok Suture and consequently evolved into an Andean-type batholith. Further east this TransHimalayan batholith developed on the southern active margin of Tibet without the prior development of an island arc. Ophiolites were obducted onto the shelf of India in the late Cretaceous to Lower Palaeocene before the closing of Tethys and the formation of the Indus—Yarlung Zangbo Suture at about 50 Ma. Post-collisional northward indentation of India at ca.5 cm a-1 since the Eocene has redeformed this accreted terrane collage; palaeomagnetic evidence suggests this indentation has given rise to some 2000 km of intracontinental shortening. Expressions of this shortening are the uplift of mid-crustal gneisses in the Karakoram on a late-Tertiary breakback thrust, folding of Palaeogene redbeds in Tibet, south-directed thrust imbrication of the foreland and shelf of the Indian Plate, north-directed back-thrusts along the Indus Suture Zone, post-Miocene spreading and uplift of thickened Tibet, giving rise to N—S extensional faults, and strike-slip faults, which allowed eastward escape of Tibetan fault blocks.


1974 ◽  
Vol 111 (1) ◽  
pp. 35-41 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. M. Wilkinson ◽  
J. R. Cann

SummaryIn order to obtain further evidence for the tectonic environment of generation of the basaltic rocks of the Ballantrae igneous complex, specimens of pillow lavas, dolerites, glaucophane schists and amphibolites were analysed for Ti, Zr, Y and Nb. Using Ti–Zr–Y, Ti–Zr and Y/Nb diagrams, three different genetic groups have been distinguished – (i) hot-spot basalts round Downan Point, round Bennane Head as far N as Balcreuchan Port, and also within serpentinite around Lendalfoot, (ii) island arc low-potassium tholeiites between Balcreuchan Port and Gamesloup, and (iii) possible ocean floor basalts at Knockormal and Knocklaugh. The interrelationships of these groups are in doubt. The hot-spot basalts may have been erupted through oceanic crust, but they could have formed prior to, or subsequent to, the island arc activity. More likely, the hot-spot basalts formed (possibly on oceanic crust) at a considerable distance from the island arc, and the two were later brought together tectonically, probably at the subduction zone associated with the arc.


1996 ◽  
Vol 14 ◽  
Author(s):  
T. Khan ◽  
M. A. Khan ◽  
M. Q. Jan ◽  
M. Latif

In this paper, we present geological description of an area located between Gilgit and Chilas within the Kohistan terrane. This terrane has been considered an intra-oceanic island arc, formed due to northward subduction of the Neo-tethyan lithospheric plate. At present, it is squeezed between the Karakoram­ Asian and Indian continental plates. Both the contacts are marked by suture zones, that is, Shyok (MKT) in the north and Indus (MMT) sutures in the south, respectively. The investigated area consists of plutonic, metamorphosed volcanic and sedimentary rocks, the Chilas Complex, and the Kamila Amphibolite. The metamorphosed volcanic and sedimentary rocks are packaged into the Jagfot Group. This group comprises basal turbiditic sediments, intercalated with amphibolites and calc-silicates (the Gilgit Formation), followed upward by the Gashu-Confluence Volcanics = Chait Volcanic Group, and finally the Thelichi Formation = Yasin Group of Aptian-Albian age. The Thelichi Formation comprises a volcanic base (Majne volcanics) and overlying turbidites, local intercalation of marbles, volcaniclastics and lava flows. Greenschist and amphibolite facies are common in the Jaglot Group, and particularly the sillimanite in the Gilgit Formation. A pair of anticline (the Gilgit anticline) and syncline (the Jaglot syncline) make up the structural scenario. On the basis of field geology, we conclude that the entire Jaglot Group and its equivalents, the Yasin Group, Chait Volcanic Group in Kohistan, and Burjila Formation, Bauma Harel Formation and Katzarah Formation in Ladakh show intra-oceanic back-arc basin rather than island arc affinities as suggested in the past.


Geology ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 35 (8) ◽  
pp. 683 ◽  
Author(s):  
Carlos J. Garrido ◽  
Jean-Louis Bodinier ◽  
Bruno Dhuime ◽  
Delphine Bosch ◽  
Ingrid Chanefo ◽  
...  

1989 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
pp. 135-149 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. P. CHAMBERLAIN ◽  
P. K. ZEITLER ◽  
M. Q. JAN
Keyword(s):  

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