A slab breako¡ model for the Neogene thermal evolution of
South Karakorum and South Tibet
G. Mahe ¨o
a;
*, S. Guillot
a
, J. Blichert-Toft
a
, Y. Rolland
b
, A. Pe ªcher
b
a
Laboratoire de Dynamique de la Lithosphe ©re, CNRS UMR 5570, Universite ¨ Lyon 1 et Ecole Normale Supe ¨rieure de Lyon,
27 bd du 11 Novembre 1918, 69622 Villeurbanne, France
b
LGCA, UPRES-A5025 CNRS ^ Universite ¨ J. Fourier, Maison des Ge ¨osciences, P.O. Box 53, 38041 Grenoble, France
Received 9 July 2001; received in revised form 12 November 2001; accepted 14 November 2001
Abstract
On the South Karakorum margin, Neogene high-temperature^medium-pressure (HT^MP) gneisses define an east^
west trending thermal anomaly. These rocks have been heated from 600 to 750³C during a slight pressure drop from 0.7
to 0.5 GPa. Their retrogressive path cross-cuts the relaxed geotherm of tectonically thickened crust. Such a P^T
evolution occurs only if an advective source of heat is involved. Involvement of an advective heat source is also implied
by the occurrence of Neogene granitoids and lamprophyres within the HT^MP gneiss area. These rocks are strongly
enriched in large ion lithophile elements relative to primitive mantle and show negative high field strength element
anomalies. We interpret these geochemical characteristics to be the result of melting of metasomatized Asian
lithospheric mantle. The Nd and Sr isotopic compositions of the South Karakorum Neogene magmatic rocks
(O
Nd
= 312 to 37 and
87
Sr/
86
Sr = 0.705^0.725) further suggest they could have originated from mixing between Asian
variously metasomatized mantle and Precambrian crust. By contrast, the origin of the youngest magmatic rocks ( 6 10
Myr), here exemplified by the Hemasil syenite and associated lamprophyres, requires involvement of a depleted mantle.
The combined O
Hf
^O
Nd
signature of these rocks (O
Hf
= +10.4^+11.5 and O
Nd
= +3.4^+4.3) suggests that the source of the
Hemasil syenite could have been depleted mantle contaminated by oceanic sediments, likely during the earlier
subduction of the Tethyan ocean. Neogene magmatic rocks with the same geochemical characteristics and evolution as
those of South Karakorum have previously been described in South Tibet. Based on their location and the geochemical
evolution of their source region, we here propose that the Neogene magmatic and metamorphic evolution of the South
Asian margin was controlled by slab breakoff of the subducting Indian continental margin starting at about 25 Ma.
This model is supported by available geophysical data from South Karakorum and South Tibet. ß 2002 Elsevier
Science B.V. All rights reserved.
Keywords: Karakorum; Xizang china; high temperature; medium pressure; gneisses; Neogene; magmas; slabs
1. Introduction
Understanding the origin of high-temperature^
medium-pressure (HT^MP) gneisses associated
with migmatites and mantle-derived magmatic
rocks in orogenic areas may help provide insight
0012-821X / 02 / $ ^ see front matter ß 2002 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.
PII:S0012-821X(01)00578-7
* Corresponding author. Tel.: +33-4-7243-2735;
Fax: +33-4-7244-8593.
E-mail address: gwelt@alto.univ-lyon1.fr (G. Mahe ¨o).
Earth and Planetary Science Letters 195 (2002) 45^58
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