The break-up of the Indian subcontinent from Gondwana: constrain by detrital zircon U-Pb dating of mid- Paleozoic-early Cenozoic strata in eastern Nepal
- 1Kathmandu Center for Research and Education, CAS-TU, Kirtipur, Nepal
- 2Key Laboratory of Continental Collision and Plateau Uplift, Institute of Tibetan Plateau Research, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100101, China
The rifting and the amalgamation of earth landmass is a continuous process. The assembly of the Gondwana lasted from ~730 Ma to 500 Ma, and most of the mass is covered by glaciation at the southern hemisphere. Afterthought experienced multiple episodes of rifting and collision of small ribbon shape microcontinents. The extra-peninsular Gondwana sequence is discontinuous in the Himalayan orogenic belt while peninsular Gondwana sequence is broadly distributed in numerous intracratonic basins of peninsular India. The detrital zircon U-Pb ages from Permo-Carboniferous sequence peak at ~1164 with a subordinate peak at ~1305 Ma. This result emphasised that the sediments were mainly sourced from the Stenian magmatism in Albany-Fraser orogeny or the East Africa-Nibua and eastern coast of India, and southwest Australia. Also, the unit also contains sporadic volcanic unit (Baraha Volcanics). The Saptakoshi Formation, uncomfortably overlain the Khokha Diamictite, yield the peaks at ~522 Ma and 941 Ma with a younger peak at ~113 Ma with some older peaks at ~1811 and 1917 Ma. This younger detritus possibly sourced from the Rajhmahal basalt ~~115-120 Ma) while the remaining grains show a similar trend to the underlying Diamictite and overlying Tamrang Formation. Additionally, the Tamrang Formation have peaks at ~976 Ma, and 1716 Ma, identically identical to the Greater Himalayan sequence. The U-Pb age distribution of these three units coincide with the Tethys Himalaya further brings the possibility that either they share the same provenance or recycled from the Tethys Himalaya till Permian and onwards there was input from the Lhasa terrane, South Qiangtang terrane, and Indo China blocks.
How to cite: Baral, U. and Lin, D.: The break-up of the Indian subcontinent from Gondwana: constrain by detrital zircon U-Pb dating of mid- Paleozoic-early Cenozoic strata in eastern Nepal, EGU General Assembly 2020, Online, 4–8 May 2020, EGU2020-66, https://doi.org/10.5194/egusphere-egu2020-66, 2019