Tectonic Evolution of the Western Margin of the Burma Microplate Based on New Fossil and Radiometric Age Constraints

dc.contributor.author Aitchison, Jonathan C.
dc.contributor.author Ao, Aliba
dc.contributor.author Bhowmik, Santanu
dc.contributor.author Clarke, Geoffrey L.
dc.contributor.author Ireland, Trevor R.
dc.contributor.author Kachovich, Sarah
dc.contributor.author Lokho, Kapesa
dc.contributor.author Stojanovic, Denis
dc.contributor.author Roeder, Tara
dc.contributor.author Truscott, Naomi
dc.contributor.author Zhen, Yan
dc.contributor.author Zhou, Renjie
dc.date.accessioned 2022-03-26T23:50:22Z
dc.date.available 2022-03-26T23:50:22Z
dc.date.issued 2019-01-01
dc.description.abstract Results of biostratigraphic and geochronological investigations in eastern Nagaland and Manipur, NE India, provide new constraints on the tectonic evolution of the western margin of the Burma microplate. U/Pb zircon ages indicate that the Naga Hills ophiolite developed in a suprasubduction zone setting as part of an intraoceanic island arc developed during late Early Cretaceous (mid-Aptian) time and is younger than similar rocks exposed along the Indus-Yarlung Tsangpo suture zone. Radiolarian microfossils provide Jurassic and Cretaceous age constraints for Tethyan ocean floor sediments that were subducted beneath the forming ophiolite. Timing of the emplacement of these rocks onto the passive margin of eastern India is constrained by Paleocene/Eocene radiolarians in sediments over which the ophiolitic assemblage has been thrust. Previously undated schists and gneisses in the Naga Metamorphics are of Early Ordovician age, and their sedimentary protolith was most likely derived from sources in the south of Western Australian and East Antarctica. After Barrovian-style metamorphism, these rocks were uplifted and eroded becoming an important source of detritus shed into the Eocene Phokphur Formation. This unit also contains abundant clasts sourced from the disrupted basement of the Naga Hills ophiolite, which it overlies. It also contains Permo-Triassic-aged detritus eroded off an enigmatic source that was possibly a continental convergent margin arc system somewhere along the northern margin of Gondwana.
dc.identifier.citation Tectonics
dc.identifier.issn 02787407
dc.identifier.uri 10.1029/2018TC005049
dc.identifier.uri https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1029/2018TC005049
dc.identifier.uri https://dspace.uohyd.ac.in/handle/1/2691
dc.subject collision
dc.subject ophiolite
dc.subject radiolaria
dc.subject suture zone
dc.subject tectonic reconstruction
dc.subject zircon
dc.title Tectonic Evolution of the Western Margin of the Burma Microplate Based on New Fossil and Radiometric Age Constraints
dc.type Journal. Article
dspace.entity.type
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