40AR/39AR THERMOCHRONOLOGY OF THE KAMPA DOME, SOUTHERN TIBET: IMPLICATIONS FOR TECTONIC EVOLUTION OF THE NORTH HIMALAYAN GNEISS DOMES

dc.contributor.authorQuigley M.
dc.contributor.authorWilson C.J.L.
dc.contributor.authorSandiford M.
dc.contributor.authorPhillips D.
dc.contributor.authorLiangjun Y.
dc.contributor.authorXiaohan L.
dc.date.accessioned2025-03-15T04:58:34Z
dc.date.available2025-03-15T04:58:34Z
dc.date.issued2006
dc.description.abstractStructural and thermochronological studies of the Kampa Dome provide constraints on timing and mechanisms of gneiss dome formation in southern Tibet. The core of Kampa Dome contains the Kampa Granite, a Cambrian orthogneiss that was deformed under high temperature (sub-solidus) conditions during Himalayan orogenesis. The Kampa Granite is intruded by syn-tectonic leucogranite dikes and sills of probable Oligocene to Miocene age. Overlying Paleozoic to Mesozoic metasedimentary rocks decrease in peak metamorphic grade from kyanite + staurolite grade at the base of the sequence to unmetamorphosed at the top. The Kampa Shear Zone traverses the Kampa Granite - metasediment contact and contains evidence for high-temperature to low-temperature ductile deformation and brittle faulting. The shear zone is interpreted to represent an exhumed portion of the South Tibetan Detachment System. Biotite and muscovite 40Ar/39Ar thermochronology from the metasedimentary sequence yields disturbed spectra with 14.22 ± 0.18 to 15.54 ± 0.39 Ma cooling ages and concordant spectra with 14.64 ± 0.15 to 14.68 ± 0.07 Ma cooling ages. Petrographic investigations suggest disturbed samples are associated with excess argon, intracrystalline deformation, mineral and fluid inclusions and/or chloritization that led to variations in argon systematics. We conclude that the entire metasedimentary sequence cooled rapidly through mica closure temperatures at ~ 14.6 Ma. The Kampa Granite yields the youngest biotite 40Ar/39Ar ages of ~ 13.7 Ma immediately below the granite-metasediment contact. We suggest that this age variation reflects either varying mica closure temperatures, re-heating of the Kampa Granite biotites above closure temperatures between 14.6 Ma and 13.7 Ma, or juxtaposition of rocks with different thermal histories. Our data do not corroborate the "inverse" mica cooling gradient observed in adjacent North Himalayan gneiss domes. Instead, we infer that mica cooling occurred in response to exhumation and conduction related to top-to-north normal faulting in the overlying sequence, top-to-south thrusting at depth, and coeval surface denudation. © 2006 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
dc.identifierhttps://elibrary.ru/item.asp?id=31315651
dc.identifier.citationTectonophysics, 2006, 421, 3-4, 269-297
dc.identifier.doi10.1016/j.tecto.2006.05.002
dc.identifier.issn0040-1951
dc.identifier.urihttps://repository.geologyscience.ru/handle/123456789/48470
dc.subject40AR/39AR THERMOCHRONOLOGY
dc.subjectGNEISS DOMES
dc.subjectHIMALAYA
dc.subjectTIBET
dc.subjectCambrian
dc.subjectMiocene
dc.subjectOligocene
dc.subject.agePaleozoic::Cambrian
dc.subject.ageПалеозой::Кембрийская
dc.subject.ageCenozoic::Neogene::Miocene
dc.subject.ageКайнозой::Неоген::Миоцен
dc.subject.ageCenozoic::Paleogene::Oligocene
dc.subject.ageКайнозой::Палеоген::Олигоцен
dc.title40AR/39AR THERMOCHRONOLOGY OF THE KAMPA DOME, SOUTHERN TIBET: IMPLICATIONS FOR TECTONIC EVOLUTION OF THE NORTH HIMALAYAN GNEISS DOMES
dc.typeСтатья

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