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Construction of the granitoid crust of an island arc part I: geochronological and geochemical constraints from the plutonic Kohistan (NW Pakistan)
Authors:Oliver E. Jagoutz  J.-P. Burg  S. Hussain  H. Dawood  T. Pettke  T. Iizuka  S. Maruyama
Affiliation:(1) Department of Earth Sciences, ETH and University Zurich, Sonneggstrasse 5/NO, 8092 Zurich, Switzerland;(2) Department of Earth, Atmospheric, and Planetary Sciences, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, USA;(3) Pakistan Museum of Natural History, Garden Avenue, Shakarparian, Islamabad, 44 000, Pakistan;(4) Department of Earth Sciences, University of Bern, Baltzerstrasse 1+3, 3012 Bern, Switzerland;(5) Research School of Earth Sciences, The Australian National University, Mills Rd., Canberra, ACT, 0200, Australia;(6) Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, Tokyo Institute of Technology, Tokyo 152, Japan
Abstract:We present major and trace element analyses and U–Pb zircon intrusion ages from I-type granitoids sampled along a crustal transect in the vicinity of the Chilas gabbronorite of the Kohistan paleo-arc. The aim is to investigate the roles of fractional crystallization of mantle-derived melts and partial melting of lower crustal amphibolites to produce the magmatic upper crust of an island arc. The analyzed samples span a wide calc-alkaline compositional range (diorite–tonalite–granodiorite–granite) and have typical subduction-related trace element signatures. Their intrusion ages (75.1 ± 4.5–42.1 ± 4.4 Ma) are younger than the Chilas Complex (~85 Ma). The new results indicate, in conjunction with literature data, that granitoid formation in the Kohistan arc was a continuous rather than punctuated process. Field observations and the presence of inherited zircons indicate the importance of assimilation processes. Field relations, petrographic observations and major and trace element compositions of the granitoid indicate the importance of amphibole fractionation for their origin. It is concluded that granitoids in the Kohistan arc are derivative products of mantle derived melts that evolved through amphibole-dominated fractionation and intra crustal assimilation.
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