“…However, the petrogenesis of post-collisional potassic rocks, and in particular the origin of trachytes, remains the subject of considerable debate due to large variations in their radiogenic isotopic composition and degree of enrichment in incompatible elements. Four models are commonly invoked to explain the genesis of trachytes: the partial melting of an enriched lithospheric mantle (e.g., Turner et al, 1996;Miller et al, 1999;Williams et al, 2004;Chung et al, 2005;Rios et al, 2007;Peng et al, 2008;Jahn et al, 2009;Zhao et al, 2009a,b;Huang et al, 2010); fractionation of mantle-derived alkali basalts (e.g., Novak and Mahood, 1986;Yang et al, 2005;Holbig and Grove, 2008); partial melting of lower crust (e.g., Huang and Wyllie, 1981;Litvinovsky et al, 2000;Tchameni et al, 2001;Chen et al, 2010); and mixing between mantleand crust-derived melts (e.g., Zhao et al, 1995;Wickham et al, 1996;Aydin et al, 2008;Yang et al, 2008).…”