dc.description.abstract |
The Himalaya is located on the seismically-active northern margin of the
Indian Plate, and provides an unique opportunity to investigate collisionrelated
geodynamic processes of a young orogenic belt during the Cenozoic-
Quaternary. Collision of the northerly-moving Indian Plate with the Eurasian
Plate has considerably remobilised the Precambrian basement and cover
sediments of the Indian Plate since 50 Ma.
The basic objective of the present work is to provide better
tectonomecanorphic and geochronological constraints on the collision tectonics
of various metamorphic nappes along the Sutlej Valley and Chor Mountains in
HimachalPradesh.
Detailed geological work along the Sutlej valley and Chor Mountain has
revealed the following major tectonic units:
(a) The Lesser Himalayan Proterozoic sedimentary foreland of quartzite-volcanic
association, now exposed in many windows.
(b) The Bajura/Kulu Nappe of the Middle Proterozoic mylonitised augen gneiss,
bounded by the Kulu Thrust at its base and the Main Central Thrust (MCT) /
Jutogh Thrust (JT) at the top.
(c) The Higher Himalayan Crystalline (HHC) belt in the north is thrust
southwestward over the Proterozoic Lesser Himalayan foreland of the Kulu-
Rampur Window and Bajura/Kulu Nappe along the folded MCT/JT. Atleast two
Proterozoic concordant to discordant magmatic events have been identified
in the HHC, which lacks any Tertiary leucogranite bodies in the basal part.
(d) The Jutogh Nappe in parts of Chor Mountain and Luhri-Anni-Dalash region is
separated from the Bajura/Kulu Nappe and less metamorphosed Chail Nappe by
the Jutogh Thrust. The contact of the Chor granitoid, occurring at the top
of the Jutogh metamorphics is characterised by intensely mylonitised
porphyritic granite gneiss due to presence of the Chor thrust.
Between Jakhri and Wangtu, the HHC belt has undergone four distinct
deformational phases. The earliest isolated tightly appressed "flame type' F,
fold hinges are developed on lithological/metamorphic banding SQ having axial
plane foliation Sp which appears to be the earliest recognisable penetrative
planar fabric. The most pervasive second deformational phase develops an
intense planar fabric S2, which is axial planar to the N-NE/S-SW plunging F2
folds. Being the main foliation, it is a composite planar fabric with S- surface
being consistently rotated SW due to C-shear fabric. It possesses a strong
down-the-dip Nto NNE plunging stretching/mineral lineation L2, that is coaxial
to the F2 isoclinal reclined folds. Asymmetric megacrysts, pressure fringes and
rotational garnet etc. reveal a consistent southwestward verging broad ductile
shear zone during the Himalayan Orogeny.
The third deformational D3 phase is characterised by two distinct early D3
and late D3b phases. In the D3a phase, F3a folds are mainly isoclinal,
inclined-type with gentle to moderately-dipping axial surfaces (S1o). F, folds
plunge either N100° or N300° at low angles. In the later D3b phase of the same
deformational event, coaxial asymmetric, SW-verging F3b folds are mostly
crenulation-type, whose hinges form a prominent lineation. Earlier L2 lineation
is folded around many F3b hinges. The axial plane foliation S3b of these folds in
metapelite and granite gneiss strike N100° with very steep dips of about
60°-80° towards N or S.
The effects of late deformational phase D^ are weak and sporadic during
brittle-ductile and brittle regime. Thrust-faults, shear bands and quartz-filled
tension gashes are developed during this late stage deformation.
The deformational pattern of the HHC contrasts with the Jutogh Nappe in its
frontal parts of the Simla Hills and Chor Mountains. In the frontal Jutogh
Nappe, earliest Dcl deformation phase produces an E or W plunging tight to
isoclinal, recumbent to moderately inclined folds on lithological layering of
the sedimentary origin Sq and is of Himalayan in age. This corresponds to the
D2 deformational phase of the HHC.
The HHC and Jutogh metamorphic nappe have undergone a polyphase
Barrovian-type metamorphism under upper greenschist to amphibolite facies
condition. Two sections have been investigated for detailed metamorphic
evolution along (a) the Nauhra-Shamra treverse in southern parts of the Chor
Mountain within the Jutogh Nappe and (b) Jakhri-Wangtu section along the Sutlej
valley in the lower parts of the HHC. Mineral assembleges reveal the presence of
two metamorphic grades in the HHC: (i) garnet and staurolite grade transition
zone and (ii) staurolite-kyanite grade, while garnet grade rocks are present in
basal Jutogh Nappe of the Chor Mountain. These assemblages appear to grow
during the main deformational event, predating the mylonitic textures of the
nappe translation.
Suitable assamblages were probed to evaluate the pressure and temperature
conditions of metamorphism, by using the garnet-biotite (GB) thermometer and
garnet-plagioclase-sillimanite/kyanite-quartz (GPAQ) and garnet-plagioclasebiotite-
muscovite (GPBM) barometers. Along the Nauhra-Shamra section,
syntectonic garnet core of MCj indicate a variation of about 130° C from
520° C to 650° C, while post-tectonic garnet rim reveals a cooling path of the
metamorphic pile with temperature falling between 480° C and 550° C at 5.4 to 7.8
kbar from its base towards higher structural levels. This variation seems to be
real rather than apparent, hence is indicative of the metamorphic inversion in
the Jutogh Nappe. In addition the Sutlej valley section of the HHC, garnet
records a temperature of about 520° C at the base along the MCT during the M2
metamorphism and attains a maximum of 650° C towards higher structural levels.
The pressure could not be estimated due to lack of suitable assemblage in this
section. On the basis of the temperature data, this section also provides
evidences of possible inversion in HHC.
Major and trace elemental analyses of 15 samples from important granitoid
bodies reveal their peraluminous S-type character within the granite,
quartz-monzonite and monzonitic field on quartz-orthoclase- plagioclase
normative plot. The Rb vs Y + Nb discrimination plot indicate that these bodies
are of Within Plate Granite (WPG). The Spidergram plotting of compatible and
incompatible elements as well as REE normalised plots indicate similar chemical
characters for porphyroclastic granite, the Wangtu granite and the Chor
granite, like the Hunza granite of North Pakistan. However, these bodies are
geochemically different from the Tertiary Gangotri (Garhwal) and Manaslu
(Nepal) leucogranites.
Four granitoid samples from the hanging wall of the MCT/JT in the HHC and
Jutogh Nappe have been dated by U-Pb systematics on zircons using isotopic
dilution technique. The U-Pb zircon ages are of about 2.0 Ga, 1.8 Ga and 0.9 Ga,
indicating the presence of the Proterozoic elements in the NW-Himalaya. The
Chor granitoid in frontal parts of the Jutogh Nappe presents a complex history
in the deformed and undeformed components; the latter yields an upper
intercept of primary crystallisation age of 910 ± 23 Ma (2o) from 7-point
regression line, though better age of 912 i 6 Ma (2o) is estimated from 5-point
regression line. Although the deformed Chor granitoid is not the best sample for
this analysis, it also confirms the 900 Ma age for the granitoid. Basal parts of
the HHC contain discordant aplitic granite bodies, whose U-Pb zircon age of 2068
+5Ma (2o) from 5-fraction regression line indicates an Early Proterozoic period of granite crystallisation. Another Early Proterozoic period of 1866 ± 10 Ma (2o)
for crystallisation event is indicated from U-Pb zircon age from the Wangtu
granitoid from a 5-fraction regression line. 87Sr/8"Sr ratios from all these
samples ranges between 0.706 to 0.716 and indicate their protolith to be the
Archean-Proterozoic continental crust of the Indian Plate.
Deformational patterns in this part of the Himalayan metamorphic belt
indicate that the Main Central Thrust and Jutogh Thrust sensu stricto were
formed during or after late D3 deformational event, and transported the ductily
deformed metamorphic pile. These thrusts post-date the main progressive
metamorphic events. P-T estimation, textural relationship and localised
inverted metamorphic isograds can be explained in terms of ductile shearing,
which caused the S-C fabric and, in turn, the inverted metamorphism in the HHC.
The HHC and Jutogh Nappe contain numerous Proterozoic granitoid bodies,
emplaced during an early to syn-Dj deformational event, and are now deformed
into gneisses due to the Himalayan Orogeny. Although various bodies were
emplaced atleast during three Proterozoic magmatic events having identical
crustal protoliths, their geographical distribution may possibly be controlled
by involvement of distinct tectonostratigraphic units within the Proterozoic
basement.
It, therefore, appears that collision tectonics in parts of NW-Himalaya has
caused, not only intense imbrication of remobilised Proterozoic basement in
various metamorphic nappes, but also the Lesser Himalayan Foreland in window
zone. Tectonometamorphic data from these nappes clearly reveal that main
metamorphic evolution is synchronous with ductile shearing in a thick
intracontinental ductile shear zone and predates the brittle-ductlile to
brittle emplacement of metamorphic nappes along the Main Central Thrust and
Jutogh Thrust. |
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