Xenoliths that erupted in the SE Pamir of Tajikistan from 1000 to 1050°C and 90 km depth illuminate what happens when crust founders into the mantle. 40Ar/39Ar dating of minerals from the xenoliths and volcanic host rocks of the shoshonitic Dunkeldik pipe and dike field indicates eruption at 11.2 ± 0.2 Ma. U-Pb and trace element laser-ablation split stream inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry of zircon shows that the igneous and metasedimentary xenoliths were likely derived from the crustal section into which they were intruded: the Jurassic-Cretaceous Andean-style magmatic arc and its Proterozoic-Mesozoic host rocks along the southern margin of Asia. Recrystallization of these zircons was extensive, yielding a range of dates down to 11 Ma. The zircons show distinct changes in Eu anomaly, Lu/Gd ratio, and Ti concentrations compatible with garnet growth and minimal heating at 22–20 Ma and then 200-300°C of heating, ~25 km of burial, and alkali-carbonate melt injection at 14–11 Ma. These changes are interpreted to coincide with (i) heat input due to Indian slab breakoff at ~22–20 Ma and (ii) rapid thickening and foundering of the Pamir lithosphere at 14-11 Ma, prior to and synchronous with collision between deep Indian and Asian lithospheres beneath the Pamir.
CITATION STYLE
Shaffer, M., Hacker, B. R., Ratschbacher, L., & Kylander-Clark, A. R. C. (2017). Foundering Triggered by the Collision of India and Asia Captured in Xenoliths. Tectonics, 36(10), 1913–1933. https://doi.org/10.1002/2017TC004704
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