Origin of volcanics in the Tethyan suture zone of Pakistan

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Abstract

The south Tethyan suture zone in Baluchistan has two distinct tectonic segments: 1) a north-south segment along the fold belt from Karachi to the Pamir Mountains; and 2) an east-west segment west of the fold belt in the Makran region. Along the fold belt ophiolites are obducted over folded Jurassic and Cretaceous rocks. The Maastrichtian age Parh Formation on which ophiolites are obducted contains volcanic agglomerates, flows and breccia. Preliminary petrographic and chemical analyses as well as field evidence indicates these volcanic units are oceanic island type basalts. These volcanic units may represent passage of Tethyan ocean floor over the Reunion Island "hot spot' prior to the passage of the Indian continent and Indian Ocean floor. Preliminary dates for basalt are: 72 my near Uthal, north of Karachi; 68 my in the Deccan; 32 my at site 706 in the Indian Ocean; 10 my at Mauritius and 0-2 my at Reunion. The oceanic islands formed by the movement over the "hot spot' north of the Deccan are now in the collision zone between the Indian plate and the Afghan micro-continent. -from Author

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McCormick, G. R. (1991). Origin of volcanics in the Tethyan suture zone of Pakistan. Ophiolite Genesis and Evolution of the Oceanic Lithosphere. Proc. Conference, Muscat, 1990, 715–722. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-94-011-3358-6_36

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