Collisional emplacement history of the Naga-Andaman ophiolites and the position of the eastern Indian suture |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Geological Sciences, Gauhati University, Guwahati, 781014, India;2. R&D Department, Oil India Ltd., Duliajan, Dibrugarh, 786692, India;3. Centre of Excellence for Energy Studies, Oil India Ltd., Guwahati, 781022, India;4. Department of Geology, Nagaland University, Kohima, 797004, India;1. Department of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences, NIT, Rourkela 769008, India;2. Department of Geology, Nagaland University, Kohima, Nagaland 797001, India;1. Geological Survey of India, NER, Agartala 799006, Tripura, India;2. Department of Geology, Nagaland University, Kohima 797001, Nagaland, India;1. Department of Geology, Nagaland University, Kohima Campus, Meriema 797004, India;2. Wadia Institute of Himalayan Geology, Dehradun 248001, India |
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Abstract: | Dismembered late Mesozoic ophiolites occur in two parallel belts along the eastern margin of the Indian Plate. The Eastern Belt, closely following the magmatic arc of the Central Burma Basin, coincides with a zone of high gravity. It is considered to mark a zone of steeply dipping mafic–ultramafic rocks and continental metamorphic rocks, which are the locus of two closely juxtaposed sutures. In contrast, the Western Belt, which follows the eastern margin of the Indo-Burma Range and the Andaman outer-island-arc, broadly follows a zone of negative gravity anomalies. Here the ophiolites occur mainly as rootless subhorizontal bodies overlying Eocene–Oligocene flyschoid sediments. Two sets of ophiolites that were accreted during the Early Cretaceous and mid-Eocene are juxtaposed in this belt. These are inferred to be westward propagated nappes from the Eastern Belt, emplaced during the late Oligocene collision between the Burmese and Indo-Burma-Andaman microcontinents.Ophiolite occurrences in the Andaman Islands belong to the Western Belt and are generally interpreted as upthrust oceanic crust, accreted due to prolonged subduction activity to the west of the island arc. This phase of subduction began only in the late Miocene and thus could not have produced the ophiolitic rocks, which were accreted in the late Early Eocene. |
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