Timescales of partial melting in the Himalayan middle crust: insight from the Leo Pargil dome, northwest India

Lederer, Graham W. ; Cottle, John M. ; Jessup, Micah J. ; Langille, Jackie M. ; Ahmad, Talat (2013) Timescales of partial melting in the Himalayan middle crust: insight from the Leo Pargil dome, northwest India Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology, 166 (5). pp. 1415-1441. ISSN 0010-7999

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Official URL: http://doi.org/10.1007/s00410-013-0935-9

Related URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00410-013-0935-9

Abstract

The Leo Pargil dome (LPD) in northwest India exposes an interconnected network of pre-, syn-, and post-kinematic leucogranite dikes and sills that pervasively intrude amphibolite-facies metapelites of the mid-crustal Greater Himalayan sequence. Leucogranite bodies range from thin (5-cm-wide) locally derived sills to thick (2-m-wide) crosscutting dikes extending at least 100 m. Three-dimensional exposures elucidate crosscutting relations between different phases of melt injection and crystallization. Combined laser ablation inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry U–Th/Pb geochronology and trace element analysis on well-characterized monazite grains from nineteen representative leucogranites yields a large, internally consistent data set of approximately 700 U–Th/Pb and 400 trace element analyses. Grain-scale variations in age correlate with trace element distributions and indicate semi-continuous crystallization of monazite from 30 to 18 Ma. The youngest U–Th/Pb ages in a given sample are consistent with the outcrop-scale crosscutting relations, whereas older ages within individual samples record inheritance from partially crystallized melt and source metapelites. U–Th/Pb isotopic and trace element data are incorporated into a model of melting within the LPD that involves (1) steady-state equilibrium batch melting of compositionally homogeneous metapelitic sources; (2) pulses of increased melt mobility lasting 1–2 m.y. resulting in segregation of melt from its source and amalgamation into mixed magmas; and (3) rapid emplacement and final crystallization of leucogranite bodies. Melt systems in the LPD evolved from locally derived, in situ melt in migmatitic source rocks into a vast network of dikes and sills in the overlying non-migmatitic host rocks.

Item Type:Article
Source:Copyright of this article belongs to Springer Nature
Keywords:Leucogranite, Monazite, U–Th/Pb geochronology, Anatexis, Himalaya
ID Code:129844
Deposited On:25 Nov 2022 10:43
Last Modified:25 Nov 2022 10:43

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