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Understanding pre- and syn-orogenic tectonic evolution in western Himalaya through age and petrogenesis of Palaeozoic and Cenozoic granites from upper structural levels of Bhagirathi Valley, NW India

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  16 September 2021

Aranya Sen
Affiliation:
Wadia Institute of Himalayan Geology, 33 GMS Road, Dehradun-248001, India
Koushik Sen*
Affiliation:
Wadia Institute of Himalayan Geology, 33 GMS Road, Dehradun-248001, India Academy of Scientific and Innovative Research, Ghaziabad-201002, India
Amitava Chatterjee
Affiliation:
Wadia Institute of Himalayan Geology, 33 GMS Road, Dehradun-248001, India Faculty of Science, Banaras Hindu University, Varanasi, India
Shubham Choudhary
Affiliation:
Wadia Institute of Himalayan Geology, 33 GMS Road, Dehradun-248001, India
Alosree Dey
Affiliation:
Wadia Institute of Himalayan Geology, 33 GMS Road, Dehradun-248001, India Academy of Scientific and Innovative Research, Ghaziabad-201002, India
*
Author for correspondence: Koushik Sen, Email: [email protected]

Abstract

The Himalaya is characterized by the presence of both pre-Himalayan Palaeozoic and syn-Himalayan Cenozoic granitic bodies, which can help unravel the pre- to syn-collisional geodynamics of this orogen. In the Bhagirathi Valley of Western Himalaya, such granites and the Tethyan Himalayan Sequence (THS) hosting them are bound to the south by the top-to-the-N extensional Jhala Normal Fault (JNF) and low-grade metapelite of the THS to its north. The THS is intruded by a set of leucocratic dykes concordant to the JNF. Zircon U–Pb laser ablation multi-collector inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (LA-MC-ICP-MS) geochronology of the THS and one leucocratic dyke reveals that the two rocks have a strikingly similar age distribution, with a common and most prominent age peak at ~1000 Ma. To the north of the THS lies Bhaironghati Granite, a Palaeozoic two-mica granite, which shows a crystallization age of 512.28 ± 1.58 Ma. Our geochemical analysis indicates that it is a product of pre-Himalayan Palaeozoic magmatism owing to extensional tectonics in a back-arc or rift setting following the assembly of Gondwana (500–530 Ma). The Cenozoic Gangotri Leucogranite lies to the north of Bhaironghati Granite, and U–Pb dating of zircon from this leucogranite gives a crystallization age of 21.73 ± 0.11 Ma. Our geochemical studies suggest that the Gangotri Leucogranite is a product of muscovite-dehydration melting of the lower crust owing to flexural bending in relation to steepening of the subducted Indian plate. The leucocratic dykes are highly refracted parts of the Gangotri Leucogranite that migrated and emplaced along extensional fault zones related to the JNF and scavenged zircon from the host THS during crystallization.

Type
Original Article
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2021. Published by Cambridge University Press

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