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Pre-Tertiary felsic magmatism of the Nepal Himalaya: recycling of continental crust
Institution:1. Department of Botany, Government College University, Faisalabad, Pakistan;2. Institute of Advanced Technology, Universiti Putra Malaysia, Serdang, Selangor, Malaysia;3. Department of Environmental Sciences, Government College University, Faisalabad, Pakistan;1. School of Water Resources and Environment, China University of Geosciences, Beijing 100083, China;2. Key Laboratory of Shallow Geothermal Energy, Ministry of Natural Resources of People''s Republic of China, Beijing 100195, China;3. Institute of Earthquake Forecasting, China Earthquake Administration, Beijing 100036, China;4. Institute of Tibetan Plateau Research, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100101, China;5. School of Earth Sciences and Resources, China University of Geosciences, Beijing 100083, China
Abstract:At least seven different groups of felsic magmatic rocks have been observed in the Lesser and Higher Himalayan units of Nepal. Six of them are pre-Himalayan. The Ulleri Lower Proterozoic augen gneiss extends along most of the length of the Lesser Himalaya of Nepal and represents a Precambrian felsic volcanism or plutono-volcanism, mainly recycling continental crustal material; this volcanism has contributed sediment to the lower group of formations of the Lesser Himalaya. The Ampipal alkaline gneiss is a small elongated body appearing as a window at the base of the Lesser Himalayan formations of central Nepal; it originated as a Precambrian nepheline syenite pluton, contaminated by lower continental crust. The “Lesser Himalayan” granitic belt is well represented in Nepal by nine large granitic plutons; these Cambro-Ordovician peraluminous, generally porphyritic, granites, only occur in the crystaline nappes; they were probably produced by large-scale melting of the continental crust at the northern tip of the Indian craton, during a general episode of thinning of Gondwana continent with heating and mantle injection of the crust. The Formation III augen gneisses of the Higher Himalaya, such as the augen gneiss of the Higher Himalayan crystalline nappes (Gosainkund) are coeval to the “Lesser Himalayan” granites, and their more metamorphic (lower amphibolite grade) equivalents. Limited outcrops of Cretaceous trachytic volcanism lie along the southern limb of the Lesser Himalaya and are coeval with spilitic volcanism in the Higher Himalayan sedimentary series. This volcanism foreshadows the general uplift of the Indian margin before the Himalayan collision. The predominance of felsic over basic magmatism in the 2.5 Ga-long evolution of the Himalayan domain constitutes an unique example of recycling of continental material with very limited addition of juvenile mantle products.
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