Carboniferous back-arc extension in the southern Yili-Central Tianshan Block and its significance to the formation of the Kazakhstan Orocline: insights from the Wusun Mountain volcanic belt

2021 
In Central Asia, the Carboniferous is a crucial period in the formation of the Tianshan Belt and associated bending of the Kazakhstan tectonic collage. In order to reveal Carboniferous magmatic events of the region and their tectonic implications, we conducted field investigations, zircon U–Pb dating, whole-rock geochemical and Sr–Nd isotopic studies on the Early Carboniferous Dahalajunshan Formation and Late Carboniferous Yishijilike Formation volcanic rocks of the Wusun Mountain Range (southern Yili-Central Tianshan Block). Volcanic rocks of the Dahalajunshan Formation consist of calc-alkaline basalt, andesite and dacite, yielding new zircon U–Pb ages of ~ 350 Ma. They have positive whole-rock eNd(t) values (+ 0.5 to + 1.6). In contrast, the Yishijilike Formation volcanic rocks dominantly comprise alkaline and calc-alkaline bimodal suites that erupted at ~ 337 Ma to 313 Ma and have higher whole-rock eNd(t) values (+ 2.3 to + 4.3). These two episodes of Carboniferous magmatism were correlated with partial melting of depleted mantle that metasomatized by slab-derived fluids. The late Carboniferous Wusun Mountain magmatic belt shows characteristics of a back-arc system that evolved due to trench retreat relative to the southern margin of the Yili-Central Tianshan Block. This mechanism induced an extensional regime with gradually depleting magma sources. The asymmetric retreat of the paleo-subduction zones of the South Tianshan Ocean and Junggar Ocean relative to the Yili-Central Tianshan Block was hence a vital driving force for the bending of the Kazakhstan Orocline.
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