2016
DOI: 10.1016/j.jseaes.2016.06.023
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Detrital chrome spinel evidence for a Neotethyan intra-oceanic island arc collision with India in the Paleocene

Abstract: Models that support a single collision scenario for India and Eurasia are incompatible with the evidence that an intra-oceanic island arc (IOIA) existed within the Neotethyan Ocean. Understanding the spatial and temporal extent of any IOIA is crucial for India-Eurasia collision studies as the entire ocean, including any intraoceanic features, must have been consumed or emplaced prior to continental collision.Here, we review what is known about the Neotethyan IOIA and report evidence from sedimentary succession… Show more

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Cited by 35 publications
(22 citation statements)
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“…Late Cretaceous marks collision between the KLA and the KB (Burg, 2011). During this time the emplacement of the ophiolites at the northern margin of India has been documented along the strike such as Muslimbagh-Waziristan-Dargai ophiolites in Pakistan, Spontang and Nidar ophiolites in Northwest India, and ophiolites of Central Tibet (Baxter et al, 2016;Brookfield & Reynolds, 1981;Corfield et al, 1999;Ding et al, 2005;Green et al, 2008;Searle et al, 1987;Treloar & Izatt, 1993). Therefore, we consider the possibility that this angular unconformity might be the result of ophiolite emplacement along the northern margin of the Indian plate (Figures 9b and 9c).…”
Section: Tectonic Implicationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Late Cretaceous marks collision between the KLA and the KB (Burg, 2011). During this time the emplacement of the ophiolites at the northern margin of India has been documented along the strike such as Muslimbagh-Waziristan-Dargai ophiolites in Pakistan, Spontang and Nidar ophiolites in Northwest India, and ophiolites of Central Tibet (Baxter et al, 2016;Brookfield & Reynolds, 1981;Corfield et al, 1999;Ding et al, 2005;Green et al, 2008;Searle et al, 1987;Treloar & Izatt, 1993). Therefore, we consider the possibility that this angular unconformity might be the result of ophiolite emplacement along the northern margin of the Indian plate (Figures 9b and 9c).…”
Section: Tectonic Implicationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…For the detrital zircons of this age interval from the Xigaze forearc and syncollisional basins in north of YZSZ, researchers have reached a consensus that they had been derived from the Gangdese arc/Asian Trans‐Himalaya (e.g., Aitchison et al, 2011; An et al, 2014; Hu, Wang et al, 2016; Orme et al, 2015; Wu et al, 2010). For the coeval zircons from the Cretaceous‐Paleogene strata/mélange within and south of the YZSZ, lots of geologists interpreted they have come from the Gangdese arc (e.g., Cai et al, 2011; DeCelles et al, 2014; Fu et al, 2018; Hu et al, 2012, 2015; Najman et al, 2010; Wu et al, 2014) and a few supposed they possibly came from an intraoceanic island arc and/or ophiolites preserved in the YZSZ (e.g., Aitchison et al, 2007, 2011; Baxter et al, 2016; Bouilhol et al, 2013).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, abundant detritus of felsic volcanic, recycled sedimentary rocks, and quartz grains in the Sangdanlin Fm and Zheya Fm, Zongzhuo Fm, and Jiachala Fm from the central YZSZ and in the Pengqu Fm from the Tethys Himalaya (e.g., DeCelles et al, 2014; Fu et al, 2018; Hu et al, 2012, 2015; Li et al, 2005; Wang et al, 2011) demonstrate that the majority of the detritus was most likely eroded from the intermediate to felsic upper crust, perhaps few from the mafic‐ultramafic ophiolites (Aitchison et al, 2007; Baxter et al, 2016). Hafnium isotopic compositions of the Mesozoic detrital zircons from the Paleogene strata of the central South Tibet are both positive and negative ε Hf ( t ) values (Figure 11b), indicating two different component sources.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These tectonic processes associated with semi-continuous sedimentation, magmatic and metamorphic events have made the Myanmar Region highly prospective for metalliferous ores and gem deposits . Molnar & Tapponnier (1975) proposed that the collision of the Indian continental crust with the southern margin of Eurasia since Cretaceous (Baxter et al 2016; references therein) resulted in the eastwards extrusion of continental blocks along major strike-slip transcurrent faults, together with the clockwise rotation of the whole of Southeast Asia. Two of the major strike-slip faults, the Papun (Mae Ping) Fault Zone and the Three Pagodas Fault Zone in Mon and Kayin states, extend from the Sagaing Fault southeastwards into Thailand.…”
Section: Tectonic Setting Of Myanmarmentioning
confidence: 99%