A model for the origin of Himalayan anatexis and inverted metamorphism

被引:268
作者
Harrison, TM [1 ]
Grove, M [1 ]
Lovera, OM [1 ]
Catlos, EJ [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Calif Los Angeles, Inst Geophys & Planetary Phys, Dept Earth & Space Sci, Los Angeles, CA 90095 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1029/98JB02468
中图分类号
P3 [地球物理学]; P59 [地球化学];
学科分类号
0708 ; 070902 ;
摘要
The origin of the paired granite belts and inverted metamorphic sequences of the Himalaya has generally been ascribed to development of the Main Central Thrust (MCT). Although a variety of models have been proposed that link early Miocene anatexis with inverted metamorphism, recent dating studies indicate that recrystallization of elements of the MCT footwall occurred in the central Himalaya as recently as similar to 6 Ma. The recognition that hanging wall magmatism and footwall metamorphism are not spatially and temporally related renders unnecessary the need for exceptional physical conditions to explain generation of the High Himalayan leucogranites and North Himalayan granites, which differ in age, petrogenesis, and emplacement style. We suggest that their origin is linked to shear heating on a continuously active thrust that cuts through Indian supracrustal rocks that had previously experienced low degrees of partial melting. Numerical simulations assuming a shear stress of 30 MPa indicate that continuous slip on the Himalayan decollement beginning at 25 Ma could trigger partial melting reactions leading to formation of the High Himalayan granite chain between 25 and 20 Ma and the North Himalayan belt between 17 and 8 Ma. The ramp-flat geometry we apply to model the Himalayan thrust system requires that the presently exposed rocks of the hanging wall resided at middle crustal levels above the decollement throughout the early and middle Miocene. Late Miocene, out-of-sequence thrusting within the broad shear zone beneath the MCT provides a mechanism to bring these rocks to the surface in their present location (i.e., well to the north of the present tectonic front) and has the additional benefit of explaining how the inverted metamorphic sequences formed beneath the MCT. We envision that formation of the MCT Zone involved successive accretion of tectonic slivers of the Lesser Himalayan Formations to the hanging wall and incorporate these effects into the model. The model predicts continued anatexis up to 400 km north of the Himalayan range, consistent with the timing and geochemistry of leucogranites exhumed on the flank of a south Tibetan rift.
引用
收藏
页码:27017 / 27032
页数:16
相关论文
共 97 条
[1]  
[Anonymous], EVOLUTION, V18, DOI 10.1111/j.1558-5646.1964.tb01674.x
[2]  
[Anonymous], J NEPAL GEOL SOC
[3]  
[Anonymous], 1995, J MINER PETROL SCI
[4]   ORIGIN OF THE INVERTED METAMORPHISM OF THE LOWER HIMALAYAS, CENTRAL NEPAL [J].
ARITA, K .
TECTONOPHYSICS, 1983, 95 (1-2) :43-60
[5]   Granite-migmatite genetic link: The example of the Manaslu granite and Tibetan Slab migmatites in central Nepal [J].
Barbey, P ;
Brouand, M ;
LeFort, P ;
Pecher, A .
LITHOS, 1996, 38 (1-2) :63-79
[6]   GPS measurements of present-day convergence across the Nepal Himalaya [J].
Bilham, R ;
Larson, K ;
Freymueller, J ;
Jouanne, F ;
LeFort, P ;
Leturmy, P ;
Mugnier, JL ;
Gamond, JF ;
Glot, JP ;
Martinod, J ;
Chaudury, NL ;
Chitrakar, GR ;
Gautam, UP ;
Koirala, BP ;
Pandey, MR ;
Ranabhat, R ;
Sapkota, SN ;
Shrestha, PL ;
Thakuri, MC ;
Timilsina, UR ;
Tiwari, DR ;
Vidal, G ;
Vigny, C ;
Galy, A ;
deVoogd, B .
NATURE, 1997, 386 (6620) :61-64
[7]   INITIATION OF INTRACONTINENTAL SUBDUCTION IN HIMALAYA [J].
BIRD, P .
JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH, 1978, 83 (NB10) :4975-4987
[8]   Bright spots, structure, and magmatism in southern Tibet from INDEPTH seismic reflection profiling [J].
Brown, LD ;
Zhao, WJ ;
Nelson, DK ;
Hauck, M ;
Alsdorf, D ;
Ross, A ;
Cogan, M ;
Clark, M ;
Liu, XW ;
Che, JK .
SCIENCE, 1996, 274 (5293) :1688-1690
[9]   PETRO-STRUCTURAL STUDY OF HIMALAYAN DUCTILE THRUSTS AS SEEN IN THE EVEREST-MAKALU TRANSVERSAL (WESTERN NEPAL) [J].
BRUNEL, M ;
KIENAST, JR .
CANADIAN JOURNAL OF EARTH SCIENCES, 1986, 23 (08) :1117-1137
[10]  
Burbank D.W., 1996, The Tectonic Evolution of Asia, P149