“…These assemblages mainly consist of Nb-enriched basalts and adakitic rocks and show typical characteristics of magmas formed in a subduction zone, therefore demonstrating that southward subduction of the Junggar Ocean most likely began during the late Paleozoic (Long et al, 2011a;Tang et al, 2010a;Wang et al, 2006aWang et al, , 2007bWindley et al, 1990;Xiao et al, 2004aXiao et al, , 2008Xiao et al, , 2010Zhang et al, 2009Zhang et al, , 2012Zhu et al, 2012a). This is also supported by extensively exposed late Paleozoic accretionary complexes in the northern part of the Yili Block (Gao et al, 1997;Wang et al, 2008;XBGMR, 1993;Xiao et al, 2010Xiao et al, , 2013. In the middle Ordovician, however, calc-alkaline volcanic rocks interlayered with the marine strata indicate an active margin tectonic setting and reveal that the middle Ordovician is a key period for the southern PaleoAsian Ocean when extension (ocean opening) changed to convergence (ocean closure) (Gao et al, 1997;XBGMR, 1993).…”