“…The suture zone is represented by the Adaatsag ophiolite in Mongolia and the Onon island arc, which is associated with Devonian–Carboniferous marine turbidites (Aga terrane) in Siberia (Parfenov, Popeko, & Tomurtogoo, ; Zorin, ), and is the result of the collision of the continental Amurian superterrane with the Siberian Craton (Natal'in, ; Parfenov, Bulgatov, & Gordienko, ; Parfenov et al, ). Although numerous studies have been conducted over the past few years, including paleomagnetic, biostratigraphical, geochronological, and geochemical analyses (Bussien, Gombojav, Winkler, & von Quadt, ; Donskaya, Gladkochub, Mazukabzov, & Ivanov, ; Fritzell, Bull, & Shephard, ; Metelkin, Gordienko, & Klimuk, ; Van der Voo, van Hinsbergen, Domeier, Spakman, & Torsvik, ; Zhu et al, ), the geodynamic evolution of the Mongol–Okhotsk Ocean has remained an enigmatic problem (Tomurtogoo, Windley, Kroner, Badarch, & Liu, ; Zorin, ). In particular, the ophiolites that occur in the suture zone are poorly studied, which has limited our understanding of the tectonic evolution of the Mongol–Okhotsk Ocean.…”