Paleomagnetism and geochronology of Early Cretaceous volcanic rocks in the eastern segment of the Lhasa terrane, Tibetan Plateau, and their tectonic implications

GEOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF AMERICA BULLETIN(2023)

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摘要
Paleogeographic reconstructions of the Lhasa terrane for the Cretaceous provide important constraints on the evolution of the Neo-Tethys Ocean and crustal shortening within Asia. However, the Cretaceous paleo-geography of the Lhasa terrane remains con-tentious. A direct way to study this issue is to conduct paleomagnetic investigations of the Cretaceous rocks of the Lhasa terrane; how-ever, most previous Cretaceous paleomag-netic investigations of the Lhasa terrane were conducted in the middle and western seg-ments of this terrane. Different vertical-axis rotations affected different parts of the Lhasa terrane following the India-Asia collision, and therefore paleomagnetic data from the western and middle segments of the Lhasa terrane cannot necessarily be used to directly constrain the paleolatitudes of its eastern segment. This study presents paleomagnetic data from the Early Cretaceous volcanic rocks with well-constrained ages from the Luolong area in the eastern segment of the Lhasa terrane. Isotope geochronology re-veals that these rocks formed at 127-124 Ma. The mean high-temperature direction ob-tained from 17 paleomagnetic sites is decli-nation/inclination (Ds/Is) = 21.8 degrees/19.0 degrees with ks = 65.8 and alpha 95 = 4.4 degrees (k-best estimate of the precision parameter; alpha 95-radius of the 95% probability ellipse around the mean direction; s-stratigraphic coordinates). Pe-trographic investigations, a positive fold test, a reversal test, and a paleosecular variation test indicate the primary origin of this char-acteristic remanence. A paleomagnetic pole of 60.9 degrees N, 227.2 degrees E with dp/dm = 2.4 degrees/4.6 degrees (dp/dm-semi-axes of the 95% probability ellipse around the mean pole) yields a paleo-latitude of 9.2 +/- 2.4 degrees N for the eastern seg-ment of the Lhasa terrane. Combined with reliable results from previous paleomagnetic studies, we draw the following conclusions. (1) During the Early Cretaceous, the Lhasa terrane was oriented WNW-ESE as a whole, and the eastern-middle segments may have been oriented nearly E-W. (2) Asia has ac-commodated 2050 +/- 230 km of N-S crustal shortening along 96 degrees E longitude since the Early Cretaceous. (3) The minimum N-S width of the Neo-Tethys Ocean at ca. 125 Ma was 4185 +/- 300km.
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early cretaceous volcanic rocks,tibetan plateau,geochronology,paleomagnetism,lhasa terrane
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