The Laqiong Sb-Au deposit: Implications for polymetallic mineral systems in the Tethys-Himalayan zone of southern Tibet, China

The Laqiong Sb-Au deposit: Implications for polymetallic mineral systems in the Tethys-Himalayan zone of southern Tibet, China

Gondwana Research 72 (2019) 83–96 Contents lists available at ScienceDirect Gondwana Research journal homepage: www.elsevier.com/locate/gr The Laqi...

7MB Sizes 0 Downloads 15 Views

Gondwana Research 72 (2019) 83–96

Contents lists available at ScienceDirect

Gondwana Research journal homepage: www.elsevier.com/locate/gr

The Laqiong Sb-Au deposit: Implications for polymetallic mineral systems in the Tethys-Himalayan zone of southern Tibet, China Hua-Wen Cao a, Hao Zou b,c,⁎, Leon Bagas d,e, Lin-Kui Zhang a, Zhi Zhang a, Zhong-Quan Li b a

Chengdu Centre, China Geological Survey, Chengdu, Sichuan 610081, China Key Laboratory of Tectonic Controls on Mineralisation and Hydrocarbon Accumulation of Ministry of Land and Resources, Chengdu University of Technology, Chengdu, Sichuan 610059, China State Key Laboratory of Lithospheric Evolution, Institute of Geology and Geophysics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100029, China d MLR Key Laboratory of Metallogeny and Mineral Assessment, Institute of Mineral Resources, CAGS, Beijing 100037, China e Centre of Exploration Targeting, The University of Western Australia, 35 Stirling Highway, CRAWLEY, WA 6009, Australia b c

a r t i c l e

i n f o

Article history: Received 7 November 2018 Received in revised form 18 February 2019 Accepted 25 February 2019 Available online 26 March 2019 Handling Editor: F. Pirajno Keywords: Laqiong Sb-Au deposit U-Pb zircon age Ar-Ar age C–H–O–Pb–S isotope Tethys-Himalayan zone

a b s t r a c t The Himalayan mineral field includes over 50 quartz-vein type Sb-Au deposits, and placer Au deposits. The poorly documented Laqiong deposit is a typical example of quartz-vein type Sb-Au mineralisation in Tethys Himalayan sequence. The orebody are controlled by shallow north-dipping normal faults and north–south trending faults. Magmatic zircons extracted from muscovitic leucocratic granite from the southern part of the Laqiong mine area yield a Laser Ablation-Inductively Coupled Plasma-Mass Spectrometry U-Pb age of 14 ± 1 Ma (n = 12, MSWD = 0.9) that is similar to the 40Ar/39Ar age of ca. 14 Ma from hydrothermal sericite in auriferous sulphide-quartz veins. The εHf(t) values for the magmatic zircon rims range from −5.4 to −1.9, corresponding to two-stage Hf model ages of 1403–1214 Ma. Quartz from the mineralised veins has δ18OH2O-SMOW values varying from +4.97 to +9.59‰ and δDH2O-SMOW values ranging from −119.7 to −108.1‰. The δ13CV-PDB values for calcite from the ore Stage III range from −6.9 to −5.3‰, and calcite from Stage IV are −3.5 to −1.7‰. The δ18OV-SMOW values for calcite from Stage III are +20.3 to +20.6‰ and for Stage IV are −6.3 to −4.9‰. The stibnite and pyrite samples have 208Pb/204Pb ratios of 38.158 to 39.02, 207Pb/204Pb ratios of 15.554 to 15.698, and 206 Pb/204Pb ratios of 17.819 to 18.681, and bulk and in-situ δ34SV-CDT values for stibnite, arsenopyrite and pyrite range from −1.1 to +2.3‰. The calcite from the orebodies are enriched in MREE and depleted in LREE and HREE. Fieldwork, petrological, and geochemical data collected during our study leads to the following salient findings: the mineralising fluid is a mix of magmatic and meteoric fluids; and the deposit is closely related to the emplacement of Miocene granites originating from a thickened continental crust. © 2019 International Association for Gondwana Research. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

1. Introduction The Tethys-Himalayan tectonic zone, also known as the TethysHimalayan foreland tectonic belt, is located between the Tibetan Plateau to the north and Indian Plate to the south (Fig. 1). The orogen is significantly mineralised and often referred to as the “global giant Himalayan metallogenic belt” (Schwartz et al., 1995; Pirajno, 2013 and references therein; Zheng et al., 2014; Hou and Zhang, 2015; Cao et al., 2016, 2017). The multi-metallic mineralisation includes the Cenozoic Au, Sb, Au-Sb, Pb–Zn–Ag, and W-Sn-Be deposits (Sun et al., 2016a). The Cenozoic Southern Tibet Sb-Au mineral field is in the Himalayan Orogen to the south of the Indus-Yarlung-Zhangbo Suture (IYZS) and to the north of the South Tibet Detachment zone (STD) (Fig. 1a). The orogen contains over 50 Au-Sb and placer-Au deposits (Fig. 1b) (Nie ⁎ Corresponding author at: College of Earth Sciences, Chengdu University of Technology, Chengdu, Sichuan 610059, China. E-mail address: [email protected] (H. Zou).

et al., 2005; Yang et al., 2009). Examples of deposits include the Chalapu, Zhemulang, Mayoumu, and Bangbu Au deposits, Laqiong and Mazhala Au-Sb deposits, and Cheqiongzhuobu, Zhegu and Shalagang Sb deposits (Yang et al., 2009; Li et al., 2002; Nie et al., 2005; Wen et al., 2006; Duo et al., 2009; Jiang et al., 2009; Zheng et al., 2014). Models proposed for these deposits include a variety of hydrothermal fluids derived from magmatic, mixed magmatic–meteoric sources in submarine exhalative, epithermal, or orogenic settings (Zhai et al., 2014; Zhang, 2012; Yang et al., 2009; Hou and Cook, 2009). We have selected the recently discovered Laqiong Sb-Au deposit in the southern part of the Tibet mineral field as a test area aiming to better define the regional tectonic setting for the mineralisation. The data presented here are based on systematic geological investigations, geochronological, isotopic geochemistry including new: (1) robust U-Pb zircon dates of granites and Ar-Ar dates of hydrothermal sericite to precisely document the ages of magma emplacement and Sb-Au mineralisation; (2) Lu-Hf isotopes of zircon to determine the genesis of the Laqiong leucocratic granite; and (3) H-O isotope data from quartz, C-O isotopes

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gr.2019.02.010 1342-937X/© 2019 International Association for Gondwana Research. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

84

H.-W. Cao et al. / Gondwana Research 72 (2019) 83–96

Fig. 1. Geological maps showing: (a) tectonic divisions of the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau; and (b) location of Pb-Zn-Ag-Sb-Au polymetallic deposits in southern Tibet (Lin et al., 2016b). Abbreviations: THS = Tethys Himalayan Sequence, GHC = Greater Himalayan Crystalline Complex, LHS = Lesser Himalayan sequence.

data from calcite, Pb isotope data from stibnite and pyrite, bulk and insitu S isotope data from stibnite, arsenopyrite and pyrite, and the geochemistry of the calcite to constrain the source of the mineralising fluids. The results allow us to better understand the genetic relationship between mineralisation and magmatism, which are crucial for interpreting the geodynamics post the India–Eurasia continental collision.

2. Regional geology The Tethys-Himalayan Zone is located south of the IYZS and north of STD (Fig. 1a; Yin and Harrison, 2000; Yin et al., 2009; Pan et al., 2012; Zhang et al., 2012; Hu et al., 2015; Xu et al., 2015). The boundary between the Indian and Eurasian plates is marked by IYZS (Rowley, 1996, 1998; Zhu et al., 2005). The northward subduction of the Tethys oceanic plate is thought to have taken place during the Late Jurassic to Early Cretaceous at IYZS beneath the Lhasa Terrane, and closed in the Early Eocene with the collision between Indian Plate and Lhasa Terrane (Şengör et al., 1988; Zhu et al., 2013; Zhu et al., 2015; Hu et al., 2016; Najman et al., 2017).

The Tethys Himalayan sequence (THS) is located at the northern passive margin of the Indian Plate and consists of Precambrian to Early Palaeozoic orthogneiss (Zhang et al., 2019), widespread Mesozoic to Paleocene marine sedimentary units, and Eocene-Oligocene continental sedimentary rocks (Fig. 1b; Li et al., 2016; Zhang et al., 2015, 2016; Cai et al., 2016). The marine sedimentary units include low-grade sandstone, calcareous shale, siltstone and carbonate rocks, which host Cenozoic Pb-Zn, Au, Sb-Au and Sb deposits in the region (Yang et al., 2009; Wang et al., 2016; Pei et al., 2016; Sun et al., 2016a). The collision of the Indian and Eurasian continental plates resulted in the formation of the Tethys-Himalayan foreland tectonic zone (Qi et al., 2008). The zone includes complexly folded rocks with axial trends and associated brittle-ductile thrusts parallel to the orientation of the Tethys-Himalayan orogen. The STD is a large extensional tectonic zone between high-grade crystalline rocks in the Greater Himalayan Crystalline Complex and low grade THS, which are gently inclined northward, and played a major role in controlling the spatial distribution of deposits in the belt (Yang et al., 2009; Cottle et al., 2015; La Roche et al., 2016). The central part of THS contains a series of east-westward trending gneissic domes, also known as the north Himalayan gneiss domes (Fig. 1b; Zhang et al.,

H.-W. Cao et al. / Gondwana Research 72 (2019) 83–96

85

Fig. 2. Geology map of the Laqiong Sb-Au deposit in southern Tibet (a), and geological profile cross section of the deposit (b). Photographs of the ore-bearing veins at the No. I and II veis are shown in (c) and (d).

2012; Xu et al., 2013; Xu and Ma, 2015; Gao et al., 2016, 2017). Eocene and Miocene (ca. 48–8 Ma) dykes and stocks of leucogranites are present in the core of the domes (Zeng et al., 2011, 2015; Wu et al., 2015; Gou et al., 2016; Liu et al., 2016a, 2016b; Weinberg, 2016; Zhang et al., 2017; Zheng et al., 2016). The central and eastern part of THS contains large Early Cretaceous (ca. 135–130 Ma) bimodal igneous units consisting of basaltic lava, dolerite and gabbro, and minor amounts of ultramafic rocks and felsic dykes (Fig. 1b; Zhu et al., 2007, 2008, 2009; Liu et al., 2015; Ji et al., 2016).

3. Deposit geology The exposed units in the Laqiong mining area include the N100 m thick Early to Middle Jurassic Lure Formation, Middle Jurassic Zhela Formation, and Quaternary sediments (Fig. 2). The Lure Formation consists of grey to black carbonaceous calcareous shale and grey to white micritic limestone. The formation dips 10°–30° NNW and is unconformably overlain by the N500 m thick Zhela Formation in the mine area (Fig. 2b). The Zhela Formation consists of a metamorphosed succession

Table 1 Paragenetic sequence of minerals in the Laqiong Sb-Au deposit. Minerals

Stage I

Quartz Sericite Pyrite Stibnite Arsenopyrite Gold Chalcopyrite Cinnabar Calcite Dolomite Galena Jamesonite Chlorite Limonite Notes: major

minor

rare

.

Stage II

Stage III

Stage IV

86

H.-W. Cao et al. / Gondwana Research 72 (2019) 83–96

of grey to green, amygdaloidal basalt, basaltic andesite, purple tuff, grey siltstone, and grey micritic limestone, but the top of the formation is not exposed. The formation is widely exposed in the northern part of the mining area (Fig. 2a). The Middle Jurassic age of the formation is based on regional stratigraphic correlations and the presence of the Indocephalites sp., Dolikephalites sp., Reinekeia sp., and Garantiana sp. ammonite fossils (Xia and Liu, 1997; Zhu et al., 2004). Quaternary sediments are widely distributed in the region, and include diluvium along gullies, poorly sorted coarse-grained colluvium, eluvium, and locally present glacial till. The major structures in the Laqiong mining area include faults hosting the mineralised quartz veins locally called the No. I-, II- and III-veins (Fig. 2). The ore-bearing I-vein dips around 70–80° SW and

hosts most of the known Sb-Au mineralisation in the NW-SE trending Laqiong Fault. The fault is over 600 m long and the mineralised vein is in a 0.8–3 m wide and 120 m long breccia (Fig. 2c). The Sb-bearing No. II-vein is the second richest quartz vein in the area, and is hosted by a lenticular 2–5 m wide and 200 m long breccia zone developed in a N1200 m long reverse fault dipping ~60° northward (Fig. 2d). The Sb-Au(-Cu) mineralised No. III-vein is hosted by a NE-trending and NW-dipping sinistral fault that is about 500 m long, and up to 5 m wide. The mineralisation is in lenticular breccia containing disseminated pyrite, chalcopyrite and stibnite. Basalt, amygdaloidal basalt, andesitic basalt, trachybasalt, and ignimbrite assigned to the Zhela Formation are present to the north of the Laqiong Sb-Au deposit (Fig. 2a). Outcrops of leucocratic

Fig. 3. Photographs of ore and host rock alteration at the Laqiong Sb-Au deposit: (a) northward trending veins in the No. I orebody with a large amount of stibnite hosted by the Lure Formation; (b) strong alteration of the muscovitic Miocene leucogranite cut by a stibnite vein; (c) disseminated hydrothermal pyrite and arsenopyrite in strongly altered leucogranite; (d) stage II stibnite-quartz vein cutting a massive stage I vein; (e) paragenesis of Stage II minerals showing stibnite-quartz-calcite-pyrite-sericite; (f) stage II stibnite-quartz-calcite minerals; (g) stage III minerals represented by abundant quartz and minor stibnite; (h) cinnabar and limonite in the altered leucogranite; (i) massive stage IV calcite sampled from veins in the Lure formation; (j) photomicrograph of stibnite and quartz; (k) coexistence of stibnite and pyrite; (l) photomicrograph of arsenopyrite and quartz. Abbreviations: Apyarsenopyrite, Cal-calcite, Cin-cinnabar, Lm- limonite, Py-pyrite, Qtz-quartz, Ser-sericite, Stb-stibnite.

H.-W. Cao et al. / Gondwana Research 72 (2019) 83–96

87

Fig. 4. Photographs and diagrams of: (a) CL images of representative zircon grains; (b) zircon U-Pb Concordia diagrams and histograms of zircon 206Pb/238U ages for the muscovitic Laqiong leucogranite; (c) magmatic zircon U-Pb Concordia diagrams and weighted mean model ages for the muscovitic Laqiong leucogranite; and (d) inherited zircon U-Pb concordia diagrams and weighted mean model ages for the muscovitic Laqiong leucogranite.

muscovite-bearing granite are present south of the mining area, and intrude the Lure Formation around the mining area (Figs. 2a). The leucogranite is massive, and consists of quartz (40–45%), plagioclase (25–30%), K-feldspar (10–15%), muscovite (12–15%), biotite (3–4%), minor garnet (b1%), and accessory amounts of apatite and zircon.

Laqiong is a newly discovered low- to medium-grade deposit with grades between 1.04 and 74.55 g/t Au, and 0.5 to 13.77% Sb with a resource of at least 3000 kg Au and 5000 t Sb. The paragenesis of the hydrothermal mineral assemblages can be divided into four stages (Table 1). Stage I has simple mineral assemblage of quartz–sericite–

Fig. 5. Diagrams showing: (a) chondrite-normalised zircon REE patterns; (b) Ce/Ce* versus (Sm/La)N of zircon trace elements, where N indicated the assays are normalised to the chondrite values (after Hoskin, 2005); and (c) log10 Nb/Yb vs log10 U/Yb plot after Grimes et al. (2015) showing the origin of the magmatic zircon and inherited zircon grains of the Laqiong granite.

88

H.-W. Cao et al. / Gondwana Research 72 (2019) 83–96

Fig. 6. Diagrams for sericite from the auriferous sulphide-quartz veins from the Laqiong Sb-Au deposit: (a) 40Ar-39Ar plateau plot; and (b) isochron age plot.

pyrite, the Stage II assemblage contains the main Sb and Au mineralisation containing quartz–sericite–pyrite–stibnite– arsenopyrite–gold–chalcopyrite–galena–jamesonite. Stage III includes a small amount of sulphides with abundant calcite and quartz. Stage IV is characterised by calcite veins intruding the Lure Formation (Fig. 3).

dates between 188 and 169 Ma. Zircons with a weighted mean date of 174 ± 2 Ma (n = 14, MSWD = 0.98) are interpreted as inherited zircons from the Zhela Formation.

4. Samples and analytical methods

Zircon trace elements are sensitive monitors of the composition and temperature of their parental magma (Grimes et al., 2015). The trace element content of magmatic and inherited zircons from granite sample LQ-7 are listed in Supplementary Table 2. Magmatic zircons from the sample have a fractionated chondrite-normalised REE pattern indicated by strong positive Ce and negative Eu anomalies (Fig. 5a; Hoskin and Schaltegger, 2003; Whitehouse and Platt, 2003). The magmatic zircons' Th/U ratios are 1.2–2, Nb/Yb are 0.007–0.027, and U/Yb are 2.69–10.67. The U/Yb ratios are indicative of a continental setting (Fig. 5b–c, Grimes et al., 2015). The estimated temperature of zircon crystallisation using the Ti thermometry vary from at 740° to 809 °C (Watson et al., 2006; Ferry and Watson, 2007). The inherited Jurassic zircons have a fractionated chondrite-normalised REE pattern indicated by their positive Ce and negative Eu anomalies (Fig. 5a; Hoskin and Schaltegger, 2003; Whitehouse and Platt, 2003). The xenocrystic Jurassic zircons have

Twenty-two representative samples were collected from underground workings and outcrops in the Laqiong area (around 91°16′54″ E and 28°27′47″N) for various analyses. Sample LQ-7 is from a strongly altered leucogranite collected for zircon U-Pb, Lu-Hf isotope and trace elements analysis, and Sample LQ-24 is from an ore-bearing vein collected for sericite Ar-Ar dating. The other samples comprise six sulphide quartz veins for H-O isotope analysis, six calcite veins for C-O and bulk trace elements analysis, six stibnite and two pyrite samples for bulk SPb isotopes analysis, and ten spots on stibnite, arsenopyrite and pyrite analysed in-situ for S-isotopes. Detailed experimental procedures and data are presented in Appendix A, the zircon U-Pb dating analyses are listed in Table S1, zircon trace element data are given in Table S2, the Lu-Hf isotope data is presented in Table S3, the sericite Ar-Ar data are documented in Table S4, Quartz H-O data are shown in Table S5, calcite C-O data are presented in Table S6, the Pb and S analytical data from sulphides are listed in Tables S7 and S8, and trace element analytical results of calcite are presented in Table S9.

5.2. Zircon trace elements

5. Analytical results 5.1. Zircon U-Pb ages The zircon U-Pb isotopic data of the leucocratic muscovite granite are shown in Supplementary Table 1. Representative CL images of the zircons from sample LQ-7 are shown in Fig. 4a. All the zircons are euhedral in shape and have clear oscillatory zoning. All the Th/U ratios are between 0.3 and 2, which indicates a magmatic origin (Supplementary Table 2; Belousova et al., 2002). A total of 27 spots were analysed on 27 zircon grains. Twelve spots from magmatic zircons form a tight cluster on the Concordia curve, yielding concordant 206Pb/238U ages from 13 to 14 Ma with a weighted mean age of 14 ± 1 Ma (n = 12, MSWD = 0.93; Fig. 4b, c), which is interpreted as the crystallisation age of the muscovite-bearing leucocratic granite. Except for one spot on an inherited zircon yielding a date of ca. 130 Ma, 14 spots on inherited zircons form a tight cluster on the concordia curve in Fig. 4(b, d) yielding concordant 206Pb/238U

Fig. 7. Chondrite-normalised REE patterns of calcite from the Laqiong deposit. Normalised data are from McDonough and Sun (1995).

H.-W. Cao et al. / Gondwana Research 72 (2019) 83–96

89

Fig. 8. Diagrams showing: (a) histogram of ages for leucogranite in the Himalayan Orogen and the metallogenic age of Pb-Zn-Ag, Sb-Au and Au deposits in the Himalayas; and (b) zircon εHf (t) vs U-Pb ages of the muscovitic Laqiong leucogranite. For comparison, the fields of zircon Hf isotope compositions from Himalayas leucogranite are outlined (data from Lin et al., 2016a; Liu, et al., 2014; Wang et al., 2017; Zeng et al., 2015). Leucogranite age data from Nie et al., 2006; Qi et al., 2008; Gao et al., 2009, 2013; Yu et al., 2011; Huang et al., 2013; Harrison et al., 1997; Ding et al., 2005; Zeng et al., 2009; Lin et al., 2016b and this study. The geochronological date for mineral deposits are from Xie et al., 2017; Liang et al., 2015; Sun et al., 2016b; Pei et al., 2016; Lin et al., 2016b and this study).

relative high Th/U ratios range from 0.4 to 0.7, low Nb/Yb ratios of 0.002–0.006, and U/Yb ratios of 0.3–1.7 (Supplementary Table 2). The inherited zircons' estimated temperature of crystallisation using the Ti thermometry vary from at 642° to 876 °C (Watson et al., 2006; Ferry and Watson, 2007).

(t) values of inherited zircons were calculated based on each inherited zircon U-Pb age of ca. 174 Ma. The analytical results show that these zircons also have homogenous Hf isotopic compositions, with εHf(t) values of 6.7–10.9 that correspond to two-stage Hf TDM2 ages of 791–520 Ma, suggesting that the magma was derived from a juvenile Neoproterozoic crustal source.

5.3. Zircon Lu-Hf isotopes 5.4. Sericite 40Ar/39Ar ages Some of the zircons were also analysed for Lu-Hf isotopes on domains with the same or similar structure as those that were analysed for U-Pb isotopes. Eleven spots were analysed on magmatic zircons and 9 spots on inherited zircons (Supplementary Table 3). The results show that the magmatic zircons have relatively high 176Hf/177Hf ratios of 0.28261–0.28271 and low 176Lu/177Hf ratios of 0.000675–0.002032, and the high 176Hf/177Hf ratios are interpreted to represent the Hf isotope composition of the magma during magmatic zircon crystallisation (Amelin et al., 2000). The initial 176Hf/177Hf ratios and εHf(t) values of the magmatic zircon were calculated based on each magmatic zircon U-Pb age (ca. 14 Ma). The analytical results show that these magmatic grains have homogenous Hf isotopic compositions, with εHf(t) values that range from −5.4 to −1.9, which correspond to two-stage Hf model ages (TDM2) of 1403–1214 Ma, indicating that the magma was derived from Mesoproterozoic crustal sources. The initial 176Hf/177Hf ratios and εHf

The 40Ar-39Ar analytical results for sericite sample LQ-24 from the auriferous sulphide-quartz veins are presented in Supplementary Table 4 and illustrated in Fig. 6. The 40Ar-39Ar steps for sericite from the auriferous sulphide-quartz veins yield a plateau age of ca. 14 Ma based on 99.24% of the released 39Ar isotope, which were calculated from steps 1–7 (Fig. 6a). Regressing the most radiogenic steps through the composition of atmospheric argon (initial 40Ar/36Ar = 309.2 ± 10.7) on an isochrone diagram yields an age of 14 ± 1 Ma (MSWD = 1.93; Fig. 6b). This shows that the hydrothermal fluid and granite have a concordant age of ca. 14 Ma. 5.5. Stable isotopic (C–H–O–Pb–S) compositions The δ18OH2O-SMOW and δDH2O-SMOW values of quartz from stages II and III are similar and listed in Supplementary Table 5. The δ18OH2O-

Fig. 9. Diagrams showing: (a) the hydrogen vs oxygen isotope compositions for the Laqiong deposit (modified after Taylor, 1974); and (b) carbon vs oxygen isotope composition of the Laqiong deposit (modified from Taylor, 1974). The H-O isotope compositions from the mineral deposits in THS are from Meng et al. (2008); Zhang (2012), Mo et al. (2013), Yang et al. (2009), Du et al. (2013), Jiang et al., (2009), Zhou et al. (2011), Sun et al. (2010), Sun et al. (2013), Sun et al. (2016b), Pei et al. (2016). Data of Tibet hot water from Zheng et al. (1982). The C-O isotope compositions from the mineral deposits in THS are from Zhang et al. (2010), Meng et al. (2008), Yang et al. (2009). C-O isotopic data for mantle, marine carbonate rocks and sedimentary organic matters are sourced from Demény et al. (1998), Veizer and Hoefs (1976) and Hoefs (2009 and references therein).

90

H.-W. Cao et al. / Gondwana Research 72 (2019) 83–96

Fig. 10. Diagrams: (a) Y/Ho vs La/Ho plot for calcite from the Laqiong deposit (modified after Bau and Dulski, 1995); and (b) Tb/Ca vs Tb/La plot for calcite from the Laqiong deposit (Möller et al., 1976).

values vary from +4.97 to +9.59‰ and δDH2O-SMOW values range from −119.7 to −108.1‰. The C and O isotopic data for the calcite from the orebodies are listed in Supplementary Table 6. The δ13CV-PDB values are between −6.9 and – 5.3‰ for calcite from Stage III and –3.5 to −1.7‰ for calcite from Stage SMOW

IV, and the δ18O V-SMOW values are from +20.3 to +20.6‰ for the Stage III and –6.3 to −4.9‰ for the Stage IV. The Pb isotopic ratios for the six stibnite and two pyrite samples are 208 Pb/204Pb = 38.158 to 39.028, 207Pb/204Pb = 15.554 to 15.698 and 206 Pb/204Pb = 17.819 to 18.681 (Supplementary Table 7). Stibnite,

Fig. 11. Lead isotope diagrams for sulphides from the Laqiong deposit: (a) evolution curve of 207Pb/204Pb vs 206Pb/204Pb; (b) 208Pb/204Pb vs 206Pb/204Pb; (c) 207Pb/204Pb vs 206Pb/204Pb discrimination plot; and (d) 208Pb/204Pb vs 206Pb/204Pb plot for stibnite and pyrite (after Zartman and Doe, 1981). The available Pb isotope compositions for sulphide minerals and sediments are from Zhang et al. (2010), Sun et al. (2016b), Du et al. (2011), Jiang et al. (2009), Pei et al. (2016), Zhang (2012), Awang et al. (2017), Miào et al. (2017). Abbreviations: OIV - Oceanic island volcanic rocks; A - MORB; B/OR - Orogen; C/UC - Upper Crust; D/LC - Lower Crust.

H.-W. Cao et al. / Gondwana Research 72 (2019) 83–96

arsenopyrite and pyrite are the most common sulphides in the Laqiong mining area. The absence of sulphate minerals indicates that the δ34S value of the sulphides generally represents the δ34S∑S-fluids value of the hydrothermal fluids (Ohmoto, 1972). The δ34SV-CDT data from the six bulk stibnite samples range from −1.1 to −0.6‰, and the two bulk pyrite samples range from +1.5 to +1.7‰ (Supplementary Table 8). The in-situ δ34S values from the sulphide minerals range from +0.2 to +2.3‰, with of which stibnite ranging from +1 to +2.3‰, arsenopyrite from +1 to +1.3‰, and pyrite from +0.2 to +1.3‰. A characteristic is that their δ34S values decrease gradually from the core to the rim, such as in stibnite decreasing from +2.3 to +1.1‰ and pyrite decreasing from +1.3 to +0.2‰.

91

5.6. Bulk trace element analysis Trace elements and REE analytical results from the calcite samples are documented in Supplementary Table 9. The trace element are relatively enriched in the large ion lithophile elements, such as Ba and Sr, depleted in the high field strength elements, such as Nb, Ta, Zr, Hf and Th, and have relatively high Y assays. The ΣREE (excluding Y) ranges from 5.44 to 17.39 ppm, with enrichment in MREE and depleted in LREE and HREE. The ΣLREE/ΣHREE ratio ranges from 1.11 to 2.96, (La/ Yb)N ratio ranges from 0.96 to 3.71, and with positive Eu anomalies (δEu between 1.19 and 2.05) and negative and slightly positive Ce anomalies (δCe values of 0.6 to 1.03) (Fig. 7).

Fig. 12. Diagrams: (a) comparison of in-situ and bulk S isotopic compositions of sulphide minerals at the Laqiong deposit; (b) histogram of in-situ and bulk S isotopic data from the Laqiong deposit; (c) comparison of the S isotope composition derived from the mantle, seawater, and evaporates (Heyl et al., 1974; Zou et al., 2017) and data from the nearby Pb-Zn-Ag-Sb-Au deposits in THS sourced from Zhang et al. (2010), Yang et al. (2006), Yang et al. (2009), Sun et al. (2016b), Du et al. (2011), Jiang et al. (2009), Pei et al. (2016), Zhang (2012), Awang et al. (2017).

92

H.-W. Cao et al. / Gondwana Research 72 (2019) 83–96

6. Discussion

2015; Harrison et al., 1999; Zhang et al., 2005; Guo and Wilson, 2012; Gao and Zeng, 2014).

6.1. Petrogenesis of granites 6.2. Formation of metallic ore 6.1.1. Age of granites Many chronological studies have been carried out in recent years revealing that the Himalayan leucogranite plutons range between ca. 48 and 8 Ma (Fig. 8a, Schärer et al., 1984; Edwards and Harrison, 1997; Coleman and Hodges, 1995; Harrison et al., 1999; Murphy and Harrison, 1999; Schneider et al., 1999; Simpson et al., 2000; Searle and Godin, 2003; Cottle et al., 2007; Kellett and Godin, 2009; Leloup et al., 2010; Sachan et al., 2010; Zhang et al., 2012). The age of leucocratic muscovite granite in Laqiong mining area is ca. 14 Ma, which is within the age range of the Himalayan leucogranite plutons in the region. There is no documentation of ca. 174 Ma magmatism in the region, but we know that mafic and intermediate volcanic units interbedded with fossiliferous sedimentary rocks of this age are present at the bottom of the Middle Jurassic Zhela Formation. Furthermore, ca. 130 Ma inherited zircons are similar in age to the Comei-Bunbury Large Igneous Province located between China, India, Australia, and Antarctica before breakup of Gondwana (Zhu et al., 2009).

6.1.2. Origin of granites The leucocratic muscovite granite in the Laqiong mining area is severely altered, and for this reason it has not been analysed for whole rock geochemistry. The granite is included in the famous northern Himalayan leucogranitic belt in THS (Fig. 1), which is characterised leucogranites with high aluminium saturation indexes (A/CNK N 1.1) containing minerals such as muscovite, garnet and tourmaline, are silicon-rich (SiO2 N 67%), and have low iron and magnesium contents (b5%), which are features characteristic of peraluminous granites (Lin et al., 2016a). The plutons commonly form batholiths or stocks derived from melting of the crust, and the presence of muscovite has been interpreted as being indicative of “S-type” granites sourced from pelitic rocks (Gou et al., 2016; Lin et al., 2016a; Hopkinson et al., 2017; Huang et al., 2017). The muscovitic Laqiong granite has negative magmatic zircon εHf (t) values of −5.4 to −1.9 indicating derivation from a Mesoproterozoic continental source. The εHf(t) of the Himalayan leucogranites also have negative values (Fig. 8b, Lin et al., 2016a; Liu et al., 2014; Zeng et al., 2015). These characteristics of the granites have been interpreted as evidence for derivation from partial melting of a metasedimentary source in a thickened continental crust (Knesel and Davidson, 2002; Zeng et al.,

6.2.1. Timing of mineralisation The age of mineralisation is an important criterion in determining the tectonic setting for its deposition and whether it is coeval with a magmatic event (Leach et al., 1998; Sun et al., 2013; Zou et al., 2019). The age of the Pb-Zn-Ag-Sb–Au mineralisation in THS has not been well determined due to the lack of suitable minerals for dating (Yang et al., 2009). In recent years, several mineralisation events have been recognised (Fig. 8a). Examples include the Zhaxikang Pb-Zn-Sb deposit dated at ca. 20 Ma by Xie et al. (2017) and ca. 12 Ma by Liang et al. (2015), Bangbu Au deposit dated at ca. 45 Ma by Sun et al. (2016b) and ca. 50 Ma by Pei et al. (2016), and Keyue Pb-Zn-Sb deposit dated at ca. 21 Ma by Lin et al. (2016b). Sericite collected from the auriferous sulphide-quartz veins at Laqiong yield a 40Ar-39Ar age of ca. 14 Ma (Fig. 6), which is supported by a LA-ICP-MS zircon U-Pb age of ca. 14 Ma for magmatic zircons from the leucocratic muscovite granite (Fig. 3). Detail regional and district geological field studies can also be used to constrain the timing of mineralisation, especially the recognition of tectonic events and associated structures controlling orebodies in THS. At least two kinds of faults controlling Sb, Sb-Au and Au deposits have been recognised. One set includes east–trending low-angle faults dipping northwards associated with STD (Hou and Cook, 2009). The STD's-related extension is constrained in age between ca. 20 and 15 Ma (Iaccarino et al., 2017). The second set includes northwardtrending normal faults located across the Himalayan–Tibetan Orogen (Fig. 1). Normal faults cutting STD are dated at ca. 8 Ma in the Himalayas, but are N14 Ma elsewhere in Tibet (Chen and Liu, 1996; Blisniuk et al., 2001). The geochronological data from Xainza–Dinggye rift show that the E–W extension began ca. 13 Ma, and remained active until ca. 8 Ma (Zhang et al., 2012). The intersection points between the northtrending normal faults and east-trending detachment faults commonly host mineralisation. This indicates that the mineralisation in THS formed in the period between 20 and 8 Ma. 6.2.2. Source of the ore-forming fluids Microthermometric data from Sb-Au deposits in southern Tibet, such as at Shalagang and Mazhala, indicate that the ore-forming fluids had low salinities at low temperatures (Zhang, 2012; Yang et al., 2006; Du et al., 2013). The absence of daughter-minerals in fluid

Fig. 13. Sketch cross-section of the collisional zone between the Indian and Eurasian plates, showing the tectonic setting for the Laqiong mineral deposits (from Grujic et al., 2011). Dashed line—assumed displacement path of mafic granulite and eclogite. The isoresistivity contours suggest a progressively higher fluid content in the core. Seismic bright spots that indicate zones with high fluid content were interpreted as putative magma chambers. Abbreviations: THS = Tethys Himalayan Sequence, GHC = Greater Himalayan Crystalline Complex, LHS = Lesser Himalayan Sequence. STD-South Tibet Detachment system; HHT-High Himalayan Thrust; MCT-Main Central Thrust; MBT-Main Boundary Thrust; MHT-Main Himalayan Thrust.

H.-W. Cao et al. / Gondwana Research 72 (2019) 83–96

inclusions hosted by gangue quartz and calcite rules out a direct orthomagmatic source for the mineralised fluids (Yang et al., 2009). This is significantly different from the high-temperature and highsalinity mineralised fluids associated with the Miocene Gangdese porphyry and skarn deposits. The δ18OH2O-SMOW and δDH2O-SMOW values in quartz from the Laqiong deposit are derived by applying the isotope fractionation equation by Clayton et al. (1972), which plot in the same area in Fig. 9a as defined by earlier analyses of Pb-Zn-Ag-Sb-Au deposits (cf. Taylor, 1974; Kong et al., 2015, and references therein). The δD values of −119 to −108.1‰ and δ18O values of +4.97 to +9.59‰ from Laqiong deposit are lower than those of metamorphic, mantle-derived, or magmatic fluids (Fig. 9a). In addition, the H-O isotopic values have a narrow distribution between the ranges of primary magmatic and meteoric water (Fig. 9a). We therefore conclude that the ore-forming fluids of Laqiong deposit originated from a mixed source of magmatic and meteoric fluid (Zou et al., 2016). Calcite separates have higher δ13CPDB values of −6.9 to −5.3‰ for the fourth hydrothermal stage (Stage IV) and −3.5 to −1.7‰ for Stage III which are higher than those of organic matter and lower than marine carbonate, but similar to those of magmatic- and mantle-derived fluids. These data indicate that magmatic intrusions may have contributed a significant proportion of carbon into the hydrothermal fluids (c.f. Ohmoto, 1972; Liu et al., 2007; Swain et al., 2015, and references therein). The δ 18 O SMOW values determined from the calcite separated from Stage III and IV veins are distinctly different, with values of +20.3 to +20.6‰ for Stage III and −6.3 to −4.9‰ for Stage IV, and both are lower than those of sedimentary organic matter (+22 to +30‰), and different from oxygen derived from the mantle (+2 to +7‰) and magma (+4 to +12‰) (Liu et al., 2007; Swain et al., 2015). The δ18O SMOW values for calcite from Stage IV plot close to meteoric water and calcite from Stage III plot in low temperature altered field of magmatic fluid in Fig. 9b. These results indicate that the ore-forming fluids for Stage III are not derived purely from magmatic intrusions, but are probably derived from a mixed source involving meteoric water, and the Stage IV calcite is derived from meteoric water formed after the main sulphide minerals stages II and III. The REE contents are commonly “tracers” for the geochemical behaviour of rocks, therefore the Y/Ho ratio is usually used to trace fluid processes (Bau and Dulski, 1995). The Chondrite-normalised REE patterns of calcite from stages III and IV shown in Fig. 7 are distinctly different indicating that they have different sources. This is also indicated by the C-O isotopic data and trace elements (Figs. 9b and 10). The Y/Ho and La/Ho values for calcite from the same source should be similar, and the ratio between them should be close to a straight line in the Y/Ho vs La/ Ho plot (Bau and Dulski, 1995). The calcite Y/Ho and La/Ho values of homologous non-synchronous crystallisation should display a negative correlation where the La/Ho ratios of recrystallised calcite have small variations. The Stge III Calcite samples have La/Ho ratios of 4.1 to 9 and Y/Ho ratios of 38.5–40.9; and the Stage IV calcite has significantly different La/Ho ratios of 1.5–2.5 and Y/Ho ratios of 46.1–58.9. Calcite from the deposit do not plot on a straight line in the Y/Ho vs La/Ho diagram shown in Fig. 10a, which is characteristic of distinct origins for the calcite from the two hydrothermal stages (c.f. Bau and Dulski, 1995). This is also confirmed by the contrasting C-O isotope compositions (Fig. 9b). The differences indicate that calcite veins in Stage IV are probably derived from the carbonate units in the Lure Formation, and have been affected by mineralised hydrothermal fluids resulting in a decrease in La/Ho and an increase in Tb/La values (Fig. 10). Möller et al. (1976) present the Tb/Ca vs Tb/La plot as a discrimination diagram representing the source of calcite according to its sedimentary, hydrothermal, and pegmatitic affinities (Fig. 10b). Six calcite samples from the Laqiong deposit plot in the hydrothermal field and one on the line between the hydrothermal and sedimentary fields indicative of a hydrothermal origin (Fig. 10b).

93

6.2.3. Sources of the ore-forming materials The value of Pb isotopes are the most direct and effective method for tracing the source of ore-forming material, assuming they are not affected by radioactive decay and mixing, and do not vary during physical, chemical, and biological processes, and Pb isotopes remain unchanged during mineral migration and precipitation (Shen, 1987). These Pb isotopes are, therefore, used widely in the study of various types of deposits (e.g. Carr et al., 1995; Muchez et al., 2005; Zhou et al., 2013). The samples from the Laqiong deposit have high 208Pb/204Pb values of around 39, high 207Pb/204Pb values between 15.6 and 15.7, and high 206 Pb/204Pb values between 17.8 and 18.7. The Pb isotopic data plot in the Pb evolution curve and discrimination diagram predominantly in the upper crustal and orogene zones (Fig. 11; Zartman and Doe, 1981). In addition, the Pb-Zn-Ag-Sb-Au deposits in THS have similar Pb isotopic compositions, and are consistent with derivation from a Himalayan substrate (Fig. 11a, b). This might be due to the migration of sedimentary and magmatic material into ore-forming fluids forming a similar Pb isotopic composition as the host rocks (Zhang et al., 2010). Primary ore in Laqiong deposit consists of the assemblage stibnite– galena–sulphides, but lacks sulphate minerals. Hence, the δ34S values of the sulphides approximate those of the corresponding fluids (i.e. δ34S sulphide ≈ δ34S fluid; Ohmoto, 1972; Seal, 2006). The in situ δ34S values for sulphide minerals obtained range from +0.2 to +2.3‰, compared to the bulk sample analyses of −1.1 to +1.7‰ (Fig. 12a, b). These S-isotopic signatures are similar to magma-derived sulphur with δ34S values of −3 to 3‰ (Chaussidon et al., 1989), and consistent with a magma source for many Sb-Au deposits in THS (Ohmoto, 1979; Yang et al., 2009). Exceptions are the Zhaxikang and Keyue deposits with higher δ34S values characteristic of sulphur derived from rocks deposited in a marine environment (Fig. 12c; Zhang et al., 2010, Yang et al., 2006, Yang et al., 2009; Sun et al., 2016b; Awang et al., 2017). 6.3. Tectonic implications The Tethyan Himalayan tectonic belt is the product of the crustalscale shortening and thickening caused by subduction of the Tethyan oceanic plate followed by the collision of the Indian and Eurasian continents during ca. 65–55 Ma resulting in the formation of an eastward trending Himalayan orogen (Mo et al., 2007; Yin, 2006). The collision was accompanied by the formation of large-scale thrust faults, nappe structures, folds and the development of the east-trending STD and north-trending normal faults in THS. The high-grade Greater Himalayan Crystalline Complex from the middle and lower crust was exposed between by the Main Central Thrust to the south and STD to the north during the Neo-Himalayan tectonic event (Fig. 13; Patel et al., 1993; Hodges, 2000; Wiesmayr and Grasemann, 2002; Yin, 2000). The region cooled during ca. 15–13 Ma in response to a rapid tectonic exhumation by movement on late extensional structures at higher structural levels resulting in the emplacement of late leucogranite plutons (Vannay and Hodges, 1996). The Miocene magmatic activity resulted in a sharp increase in the geothermal gradient accompanied by widespread convection of groundwater along permeable zones such as the east-trending STD or north-trending normal faults. Hydrothermal fluids circulating around cooling magmatic bodies mixed with meteoric water. The degree of mixing was not the same around every magmatic body resulting in variations in the geochemistry of individual deposits deposited in dilational zones that were periodically closed and opened forming laminar, veins and lenticular Pb-Zn-Ag-Sb–Au orebodies in THS. 7. Conclusions The magmatic zircons from the leucocratic muscovite granite yield a U-Pb age of ca. 14 Ma (n = 12, MSWD = 0.93), and hydrothermal sericite from the auriferous sulphide-quartz veins yields an Ar-Ar age of ca. 14 Ma (MSWD = 1.93) in Laqiong Sb-Au deposit. These data

94

H.-W. Cao et al. / Gondwana Research 72 (2019) 83–96

suggest a close temporal relationship between magmatism and mineralisation. Magmatic zircons from the ca. 14 Ma muscovitic Laqiong leucogranite have negative εHf(t) values of −5.4 to −1.9, interpreted as being derived from the partial melting of a thickened Mesoproterozoic continental crust. The H-O and C-O isotopic data from the Laqiong deposit suggest that the fluid is a mixed magmatic and meteoric fluid. The bulk Pb isotopic data indicate that the source is from the upper crust associated with orogens. Both in-situ and bulk S isotopic data are characteristic of a deep magmatic source. In conclusion, the Sb-Au mineralisation at the Laqiong deposit is closely related to a Miocene leucogranite emplaced in a thickened crust.

Acknowledgements This study is financially supported by the National Key R&D Program of China (2016YFC0600308 and 2018YFC0604103), National Natural Science Foundation of China (41702108, 41802095, 41672196, 41741004), China Scholarship Council (201608515058) and Major cultivating project of Education Department of Sichuan Province (2018CZ0009). Appendix A. Supplementary data Supplementary data to this article can be found online at https://doi. org/10.1016/j.gr.2019.02.010.

References Amelin, Y., Lee, D.C., Halliday, A.N., 2000. Early–middle Archaean crustal evolution deduced from Lu–Hf and U–Pb isotopic studies of single zircon grains. Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 64 (24), 4205–4225. Awang, J.C., Zheng, Y.Y., Yang, W.T., SuoLang, O.Z., 2017. Mineral typomorphic characteristics and sources of ore-forming materials of Keyue Lead-Zinc polymetallic deposit, Southern Tibet. Geological Science and Technology Information 36 (3), 53–63 (in Chinese with English abstract). Bau, M., Dulski, P., 1995. Comparative study of yttrium and rare–earth element behaviours in fluorine–rich hydrothermal fluids. Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology 119 (2–3), 213–223. Belousova, E., Griffin, W.L., O'Reilly, S.Y., Fisher, N.L., 2002. Igneous zircon: Trace element composition as an indicator of source rock type. Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology 143 (5), 602–622. Blisniuk, P.M., Hacker, B., Glodny, J., Ratschbacher, L., Bi, S., Wu, Z.H., McWilliams, M.O., Calvert, A., 2001. Normal faulting in central Tibet since at least 13.5 Myr ago. Nature 412, 628–632. Cai, F., Ding, L., Laskowski, A.K., Kapp, P., Wang, H., Xu, Q., Zhang, L., 2016. Late Triassic paleogeographic reconstruction along the Neo–Tethyan Ocean margins, southern Tibet. Earth and Planetary Science Letters 435, 105–114. Cao, H.W., Zou, H., Zhang, Y.H., Zhang, S.T., Zheng, L., Zhang, L.K., Tang, L., Pei, Q.M., 2016. Late Cretaceous magmatism and related metallogeny in the Tengchong area: evidence from geochronological, isotopic and geochemical data from the Xiaolonghe Sn deposit, western Yunnan, China. Ore Geology Reviews 78, 196–212. Cao, H.W., Zhang, Y.H., Pei, Q.M., Zhang, R.Q., Tang, L., Lin, B., Cai, G.J., 2017. U–Pb dating of zircon and cassiterite from the Early Cretaceous Jiaojiguan iron–tin polymetallic deposit: Implications for magmatism and metallogeny of the Tengchong area, western Yunnan, China. International Geology Review 59, 234–258. Carr, G.R., Dean, J.A., Suppel, D.W., Heithersay, P.S., 1995. Precise lead isotope fingerprinting of hydrothermal activity associated with Ordovician to Carboniferous metallogenic events in the Lachlan fold belt of New South Wales. Economic Geology 90 (6), 1467–1505. Chaussidon, M., Albarède, F., Sheppard, S.M., 1989. Sulphur isotope variations in the mantle from ion microprobe analyses of micro–sulphide inclusions. Earth and Planetary Science Letters 92 (2), 144–156. Chen, Z.L., Liu, Y.P., 1996. The south Tibetan detachment system. Tethyan Geology 20, 32–51 (in Chinese with English abstract). Clayton, R.N., O'Neil, J.R., Mayeda, T.K., 1972. Oxygen isotope exchange between quartz and water. Journal of Geophysical Research 77 (17), 3057–3067. Coleman, M., Hodges, K., 1995. Evidence for Tibetan Plateau uplifted before 14 Myr ago from a new minimal age for east–west extension. Nature 374, 49–52. Cottle, J.M., Jessup, M.J., Newell, D.L., Searle, M.P., Law, R.D., Horstwood, M.S., 2007. Structural insights into the early stages of exhumation along an orogen–scale detachment: the South Tibetan Detachment System, Dzakaa Chu section, Eastern Himalaya. Journal of Structural Geology 29 (11), 1781–1797. Cottle, J.M., Searle, M.P., Jessup, M.J., Crowley, J.L., Law, R.D., 2015. Rongbuk re–visited: Geochronology of leucogranites in the footwall of the South Tibetan Detachment System, Everest Region, Southern Tibet. Lithos 227, 94–106.

Demény, A., Ahijado, A., Casillas, R., Vennemann, T.W., 1998. Crustal contamination and fluid/rock interaction in the carbonatites of Fuerteventura (Canary Islands, Spain): a C, O, H isotope study. Lithos 44 (3–4), 101–115. Ding, L., Kapp, P., Wan, X.Q., 2005. Paleocene–Eocene record of ophiolite obduction and initial India–Asia collision, south central Tibet. Tectonic 24 (3), TC3001. https://doi. org/10.1029/2004TC001729. Du, Z.Z., Gu, X.X., Li, G.Q., Zhang, Y.M., Cheng, W.B., Jing, L.B., Zhang, X.G., 2011. Sulfur, Lead isotope composition characteristics and the relevant instructive significance of the Lamuyouta Sb(Au) deposit, South Tibet. Geosciences 25 (5), 853–860 (in Chinese with English abstract). Du, Z.Z., Gu, X.X., Li, G.Q., Zhang, Y.M., Cheng, W.B., Jing, L.B., Zhang, X.G., 2013. The characteristics of ore–forming fluids and primary metallogenic mechanism of the Lamuyouta Sb(Au) deposit, South Tibet. Geosciences 27 (2), 294–302 (in Chinese with English abstract). Duo, J., Wen, C., Fan, X., Guo, J., Zhang, S., Chen, H., Hu, X., Li, X., Gesang, D., Liu, W., Sun, Y., Wen, Q., Li, B., Long, X., Xu, L., Huo, Y., 2009. Mayoumu Gold Deposit. Geological Publishing House, Beijing 218 pp. (in Chinese). Edwards, M.A., Harrison, T.M., 1997. When did the roof collapse? Late Miocene N–S extension in the High Himalaya revealed by Th–Pb monazite dating of the Khula Kangri granite. Geology 25, 543–546. Ferry, J.M., Watson, E.B., 2007. New thermodynamic models and revised calibrations for the Ti–in–zircon and Zr–in–rutile thermometers. Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology 154 (4), 429–437. Gao, L.E., Zeng, L.S., 2014. Fluxed melting of metapelite and the formation of Miocene high–CaO two–mica granites in the Malashan gneiss dome, southern Tibet. Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 130, 136–155. Gao, L.E., Zeng, L.S., Liu, J., Xie, K.J., 2009. Early Oligocene Na–rich peraluminous leucogranites in the Yardoi gneiss dome, southern Tibet: formation mechanism and tectonic implications. Acta Petrologica Sinica 25 (9), 2289–2302 (in Chinese with English abstract). Gao, L.E., Zeng, L.S., Hou, K.J., Guo, C.L., Tang, S.H., Xie, K.J., Hu, G.Y., Wang, L., 2013. Episodic crustal anatexis and the formation of Paiku composite leucogranitic pluton in the Malashan Gneiss Dome, Southern Tibet. Chinese Science Bulletin 58, 3546–3563 (in Chinese with English abstract). Gao, L.E., Zeng, L.S., Gao, J., Shang, Z., Hou, K., Wang, Q., 2016. Oligocene crustal anatexis in the Tethyan Himalaya, southern Tibet. Lithos 264, 201–209. Gao, L.E., Zeng, L.S., Asimow, P.D., 2017. Contrasting geochemical signatures of fluid– absent versus fluid–fluxed melting of muscovite in metasedimentary sources: the Himalayan leucogranites. Geology 45, 39–42. Gou, Z., Zhang, Z., Dong, X., Xiang, H., Ding, H., Tian, Z., Lei, H., 2016. Petrogenesis and tectonic implications of the Yadong leucogranites, southern Himalaya. Lithos 256–257, 300–310. Grimes, C.B., Wooden, J.L., Cheadle, M., John, B.E., 2015. “Fingerprinting” tectono– magmatic provenance using trace elements in igneous zircon. Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology 170, 46. Grujic, D., Warren, C.J., Wooden, J.L., 2011. Rapid synconvergent exhumation of Mioceneaged lower orogenic crust in the eastern Himalaya. Lithosphere 3, 346–366. Guo, Z.F., Wilson, M., 2012. The Himalayan leucogranites: constraints on the nature of their crustal source region and geodynamic setting. Gondwana Research 22, 360–376. Harrison, T.M., Lovera, O.M., Grove, M., 1997. New insights into the origin of two contrasting Himalayan granite belts. Geology 25 (10), 899–902. Harrison, T.M., Grove, M., McKeegan, K.D., Coath, C.D., Lovera, O.M., Le Fort, P., 1999. Origin and episodic emplacement of the Manaslu intrusive complex, central Himalaya. Journal of Petrology 40, 3–19. Heyl, A.V., Landis, G.P., Zartman, R.E., 1974. Isotopic evidence for the origin of Mississippi Valley–type mineral deposits: a review. Economic Geology 69 (6), 992–1006. Hodges, K.V., 2000. Tectonics of the Himalaya and southern Tibet from two perspectives. Geological Society of America Bulletin 112 (3), 324–350. Hoefs, J., 2009. Stable Isotope Geochemistry. 6th edition. Springer Verlag, Berlin, Heidelberg, New York, London, Paris, Tokyo 286pp. Hopkinson, T.N., Harris, N.B., Warren, C.J., Spencer, C.J., Roberts, N.M., Horstwood, M.S., Parrish, R.R., 2017. The identification and significance of pure sediment–derived granites. Earth and Planetary Science Letters 467, 57–63. Hoskin, P.W., 2005. Trace–element composition of hydrothermal zircon and the alteration of Hadean zircon from the Jack Hills, Australia. Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 69 (3), 637–648. Hoskin, P.W., Schaltegger, U., 2003. The composition of zircon and igneous and metamorphic petrogenesis. Reviews in Mineralogy and Geochemistry 53 (1), 27–62. Hou, Z.Q., Cook, N.J., 2009. Metallogenesis of the Tibetan collisional orogen: a review and introduction to the special issue. Ore Geology Reviews 36, 2–24. Hou, Z.Q., Zhang, H., 2015. Geodynamics and metallogeny of the eastern Tethyan metallogenic domain. Ore Geology Reviews 70, 346–384. Hu, X., Garzanti, E., Moore, T., Raffi, I., 2015. Direct stratigraphic dating of India–Asia collision onset at the Selandian (middle Paleocene, 59 ± 1 Ma). Geology 43, 859–862. Hu, X., Garzanti, E., Wang, J., Huang, W., An, W., Webb, A., 2016. The timing of India–Asia collision onset – facts, theories, controversies. Earth–Science Reviews 160, 264–299. Huang, C.M., Zhao, Z.D., Zhu, D.C., Liu, D., Huang, Y., Dong, M.C., Hu, Z.C., Zheng, J.P., 2013. Geochemistry, zircon U–Pb chronology and Hf isotope of Luozha leucogranite, southern Tibet: Implication for petrogenesis. Acta Petrologica Sinica 29 (11), 3689–3702 (in Chinese with English abstract). Huang, C., Zhao, Z., Li, G., Zhu, D.C., Liu, D., Shi, Q., 2017. Leucogranites in Lhozag, southern Tibet: Implications for the tectonic evolution of the eastern Himalaya. Lithos 294, 246–262. Iaccarino, S., Montomoli, C., Carosi, R., Montemagni, C., Massonne, H.J., Langone, A., Jain, A.K., Visonà, D., 2017. Pressure-temperature-deformation-time constraints on the South Tibetan Detachment System in the Garhwal Himalaya (NW India). Tectonics 36, 2281–2304.

H.-W. Cao et al. / Gondwana Research 72 (2019) 83–96 Ji, W.Q., Wu, F.Y., Chung, S.L., Wang, X.C., Liu, C.Z., Li, Q.L., Liu, Z.C., Liu, X.C., Wang, J.G., 2016. Eocene Neo–Tethyan slab breakoff constrained by 45 Ma oceanic island basalt–type magmatism in southern Tibet. Geology 44, 283–286. Jiang, S., Nie, F., Hu, P., Lai, X., Liu, Y., 2009. Mayum: An orogenic gold deposit in Tibet, China. Ore Geology Reviews 36, 160–173. Kellett, D.A., Godin, L., 2009. Pre–Miocene deformation of the Himalayan superstructure, Hidden valley, central Nepal. Journal of the Geological Society 166 (2), 261–275. Knesel, K.M., Davidson, J.P., 2002. Insights into collisional magmatism from isotopic fingerprints of melting reactions. Science 296, 2206–2208. Kong, D.X., Xu, J.F., Yin, J.W., Chen, J.L., Li, J., Guo, Y., Yang, H.T., Shao, X.K., 2015. Electron microprobe analyses of ore minerals and H–O, S isotope geochemistry of the Yuerya gold deposit, eastern Hebei, China: implications for ore genesis and mineralization. Ore Geology Reviews 69, 199–216. La Roche, R.S., Godin, L., Cottle, J.M., Kellett, D.A., 2016. Direct shear fabric dating constrains early Oligocene onset of the South Tibetan detachment in the western Nepal Himalaya. Geology 44, 403–406. Leach, D.L., Hofstra, A.H., Church, S.E., Snee, L.W., Vaughn, R.B., Zartman, R.E., 1998. Evidence for Proterozoic and Late Cretaceous–early Tertiary ore–forming events in the Coeur d'Alene District, Idaho and Montana. Economic Geology 93 (3), 347–359. Leloup, P.H., Mahéo, G., Arnaud, N., Kali, E., Boutonnet, E., Liu, D., Haibing, L., 2010. The South Tibet detachment shear zone in the Dinggye area: time constraints on extrusion models of the Himalayas. Earth and Planetary Science Letters 292 (1–2), 1–16. Li, J.G., Wang, Q.H., Cheng, J.K., Yao, P., Peng, Y.M., 2002. Study of metallogenic and prospecting models for the Shalagang antimony deposit, Gyangze, Tibet. Journal of Chengdu University of Technology 29 (5), 533–538 (in Chinese with English abstract). Li, X., Mattern, F., Zhang, C., Zeng, Q., Mao, G., 2016. Multiple sources of the Upper Triassic flysch in the eastern Himalaya Orogen, Tibet, China: implications to palaeogeography and palaeotectonic evolution. Tectonophysics 666, 12–22. Liang, W., Yang, Z.S., Zheng, Y.C., 2015. The Zhaxikang Pb-Zn deposit: Ar-Ar age of sericite and its metallogenic significance. Acta Geologica Sinica 89 (3), 560–568 (in Chinese with English abstract). Lin, B., Tang, J.X., Zheng, W.B., Leng, Q.F., Lin, X., Wang, Y.Y., Meng, Z., Tang, P., Ding, S., Xu, Y.F., Yuan, M., 2016a. Geochemical characteristics, age and genesis of Cuonadong leucogranite, Tibet. Acta Petrologica et Mineralogica 35 (3), 391–406 (in Chinese with English abstract). Lin, B., Tang, J.X., Zheng, W.B., Wang, Y.Y., Gao, Y.M., Lin, X., Yang, H.H., Leng, Q.F., Li, X.T., Tang, X.Q., Fu, Y.G., 2016b. A preliminary study of geological features and metallogenic epoch in Keyue Zn-polymetallic deposit, Tibet. Mineral Deposits 35 (1), 33–50 (in Chinese with English abstract). Liu, J.J., Zheng, M.H., Cook, N.J., Long, X.R., Deng, J., Zhai, Y.S., 2007. Geological and geochemical characteristics of the Sawaya'erdun gold deposit, southwestern Chinese Tianshan. Ore Geology Reviews 32, 125–156. Liu, Z.C., Wu, F.Y., Ji, W.Q., Wang, J.G., Liu, C.Z., 2014. Petrogenesis of the Ramba leucogranite in the Tethyan Himalaya and constraints on the channel flow model. Lithos 208, 118–136. Liu, Z., Zhou, Q., Lai, Y., Qing, C., Li, Y., Wu, J., Xia, X., 2015. Petrogenesis of the Early Cretaceous Laguila bimodal intrusive rocks from the Tethyan Himalaya: Implications for the break–up of Eastern Gondwana. Lithos 236–237, 190–202. Liu, X.C., Wu, F.Y., Yu, L.J., Liu, Z.C., Ji, W.Q., Wang, J.G., 2016a. Emplacement age of leucogranite in the Kampa Dome, southern Tibet. Tectonophysics 667, 163–175. Liu, Z.C., Wu, F.Y., Ding, L., Liu, X.C., Wang, J.G., Ji, W.Q., 2016b. Highly fractionated Late Eocene (~ 35 Ma) leucogranite in the Xiaru Dome, Tethyan Himalaya, South Tibet. Lithos 240–243, 337–354. McDonough, W.F., Sun, S.S., 1995. The composition of the Earth. Chemical Geology 120 (3–4), 223–253. Meng, X.J., Yang, Z.S., Yan, X.X., Hou, Z.Q., Li, Z.Q., 2008. Silicon–oxygen–hydrogen isotopic compositions of Zhaxikang antimony polymetallic deposit in southern Tibet and its responses to the ore-controlling structure. Acta Petrologica Sinica 24 (7), 1649–1655 (in Chinese with English abstract). Miào, H.Q., Li, G.M., Zhang, Z., Xia, X.B., Liang, W., 2017. Sources of ore–forming materials in the Keyue lead–zinc deposit, southern Tibet: evidence from sulfur and lead isotopes. Sedimentary Geology and Tethyan Geology 37 (2), 14–22 (in Chinese with English abstract). Mo, X.X., Hou, Z.Q., Niu, Y.L., Dong, G.C., Qu, X.M., Zhao, Z.D., Yang, Z.M., 2007. Mantle contributions to crustal thickening during continental collision: evidence from Cenozoic igneous rocks in southern Tibet. Lithos 96, 225–242. Mo, R.W., Sun, X.M., Yan, W., Zhou, F., Liang, Y.H., 2013. Ore-forming fluid geochemistry and metallogenic mechanism from Mazhala gold-antimony deposit in southern Tibet, China. Acta Petrologica Sinica 29 (4), 1427–1438 (in Chinese with English abstract). Möller, P., Parekh, P.P., Schneider, H.J., 1976. The application of Tb/Ca–Tb/La abundance ratios to problems of fluorspar genesis. Mineralium Deposita 11 (1), 111–116. Muchez, P., Heijlen, W., Banks, D., Blundell, D., Boni, M., Grandia, F., 2005. Extensional Tectonics and the Timing and Formation of Basin–Hosted Deposits in Europe: Ore Geology Reviews 27, 241–267. Murphy, M.A., Harrison, T.M., 1999. Relationship between leucogranites and the Qomolangma detachment in the Rongbuk Valley, south Tibet. Geology 27, 831–834. Najman, Y., Jenks, D., Godin, L., Boudagher–Fadel, M., Millar, I., Garzanti, E., Horstwood, M., Bracciali, L., 2017. The Tethyan Himalayan detrital record shows that India–Asia terminal collision occurred by 54 Ma in the Western Himalaya. Earth and Planetary Science Letters 459, 301–310. Nie, F.J., Hu, P., Jiang, S.H., Li, Z.Q., Liu, Y., Zhou, Y.Z., 2005. Type and temporal–spatial distribution of gold and antimony deposits (prospects) in southern Tibet, China. Acta Geologica Sinica 79 (3), 373–385 (in Chinese with English abstract).

95

Nie, F.J., Hu, P., Jiang, S.H., Liu, Y., 2006. 40Ar–39Ar isotope age dating on biotite samples of two monzogranite bodies occurring in the Qiongduojiang area, southern Tibet and their geological significance. Acta Petrologica Sinica 22 (11), 2704–2710 (in Chinese with English abstract). Ohmoto, H., 1972. Systematics of sulfur and carbon isotopes in hydrothermal ore deposits. Economic Geology 67, 551–578. Ohmoto, H., 1979. Isotopes of sulfur and carbon. Geochemistry of Hydrothermal Ore Deposits, pp. 509–567. Pan, G.T., Wang, L.Q., Li, R.S., Yuan, S.H., Ji, W.H., Yin, F.G., Zhang, W.P., Wang, B.D., 2012. Tectonic evolution of the Qinghai–Tibet Plateau. Journal of Asian Earth Sciences 53, 3–14. Patel, R.C., Singh, S., Asokan, A., Manickavasagam, R.M., Jain, A.K., 1993. Extensional tectonics in the Himalayan orogen, Zanskar, NW India. Geological Society, London, Special Publications 74 (1), 445–459. Pei, Y., Sun, Q., Zheng, Y., Yang, Z., Li, W., Huang, K., 2016. Genesis of the Bangbu orogenic gold deposit, Tibet: evidence from fluid inclusion, stable isotopes, and Ar–Ar geochronology. Acta Geologica Sinica – English Edition 90 (2), 722–737. Pirajno, F., 2013. The Geology and Tectonic Settings of China's Mineral Deposits. Springer Science & Business Media. Qi, X.X., Li, T.F., Meng, X.J., Yu, C.L., 2008. Cenozoic tectonic evolution of the Tethyan Himalayan foreland fault–fold belt in southern Tibet, and its constraint on antimony-gold polymetallic minerogenesis. Acta Petrologica Sinica 24 (7), 1638–1648 (in Chinese with English abstract). Rowley, D.B., 1996. Age of initiation of collision between India and Asia: a review of stratigraphic data. Earth and Planetary Science Letters 145, 1–13. Rowley, D.B., 1998. Minimum age of initiation of collision between India and Asia north of Everest based on the subsidence history of the Zhepure Mountain section. The Journal of Geology 106, 229–235. Sachan, H.K., Kohn, M.J., Saxena, A., Corrie, S.L., 2010. The Malari leucogranite, Garhwal Himalaya, northern India: Chemistry, age, and tectonic implications. Geological Society of America Bulletin 122 (11−12), 1865–1876. Schärer, U., Xu, R.H., Allègre, C.J., 1984. U/Pb geochronology of Gangdese (Transhimalaya) plutonism in the Lhasa–Xigaze region, Tibet. Earth and Planetary Science Letters 69 (2), 311–320. Schneider, D.A., Edwards, M.A., Zeitler, P.K., Coath, C.D., 1999. Mazeno Pass Pluton and Jutial Pluton, Pakistan Himalaya: age and implications for entrapment mechanisms of two granites in the Himalaya. Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology 136 (3), 273–284. Schwartz, M.O., Rajah, S.S., Askury, A.K., Putthapiban, P., Djaswadi, S., 1995. The Southeast Asian tin belt. Earth–Science Reviews 38, 95–293. Seal, R.R., 2006. Sulfur isotope geochemistry of sulfide minerals. Reviews in Mineralogy and Geochemistry 61 (1), 633–677. Searle, M.P., Godin, L., 2003. The south Tibetan detachment and the Manaslu leucogranite: a structural reinterpretation and restoration of the Annapurna–Manaslu Himalaya, Nepal. The Journal of Geology 111, 505–523. Şengör, A., Altıner, D., Cin, A., Ustaömer, T., Hsü, K., 1988. Origin and assembly of the Tethyside orogenic collage at the expense of Gondwana Land. Geological Society, London, Special Publications 37, 119–181. Shen, Y.Z., 1987. Stable Isotope Geochemistry. 376. Atomic Energy Press, Beijing (in Chinese). Simpson, R.L., Parrish, R.R., Searle, M.P., Waters, D.J., 2000. Two episodes of monazite crystallization during metamorphism and crustal melting in the Everest region of the Nepalese Himalaya. Geology 28, 403–406. Sun, X.M., Wei, H.X., Zhai, W., Shi, G., Lian, Y.H., Mo, R.W., Han, M.X., Zhang, X.G., 2010. Ore–forming fluid geochemistry and metallogenic mechanism of Bangbu large– scale orogenic gold deposit in southern Tibet, China. Acta Petrologica Sinica 26, 1672–1684 (in Chinese with English abstract). Sun, Q.Z., Zheng, Y.C., Hou, Z.Q., Yang, Z.S., Li, W., Huang, K.X., Zhang, S., 2013. Genesis of the Bangbu orogenic gold deposit in Tibet: constraints from fluid inclusions and isotopic composition. Mineral Deposits 32 (2), 353–366 (in Chinese with English abstract). Sun, X., Zheng, Y., Wang, C., Zhao, Z., Geng, X., 2016a. Identifying geochemical anomalies associated with Sb–Au–Pb–Zn–Ag mineralization in north Himalaya, southern Tibet. Ore Geology Reviews 73, 1–12. Sun, X.M., Wei, H.X., Zhai, W., Shi, G., Liang, Y., Mo, R., Han, M., Yi, J., Zhang, X., 2016b. Fluid inclusion geochemistry and Ar–Ar geochronology of the Cenozoic Bangbu orogenic gold deposit, southern Tibet, China. Ore Geology Reviews 74, 196–210. Swain, S.K., Sarangi, S., Srinivasan, R., Sarkar, A., Bhattacharya, S., Patel, S.C., Pasayat, R.M., Sawkar, R.H., 2015. Isotope (C and O) composition of auriferous quartz carbonate veins, central lode system, Gadag Gold Field, Dharwar Craton, India: Implications to source of ore fluids. Ore Geology Reviews 70, 305–320. Taylor, H.P., 1974. The application of oxygen and hydrogen isotope studies to problems of hydrothermal alteration and ore deposition. Economic Geology 69, 843–883. Vannay, J.-C., Hodges, K., 1996. Tectonometamorphic evolution of the Himalayan metamorphic core between the Annapurna and Dhaulagiri, central Nepal. Journal of Metamorphic Geology 14 (5), 635–656. Veizer, J., Hoefs, J., 1976. The nature of O18/O16 and C13/C12 secular trends in sedimentary carbonate rocks. Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 40, 1387–1395. Wang, J.G., Wu, F.Y., Garzanti, E., Hu, X., Ji, W.Q., Liu, Z.C., Liu, X.C., 2016. Upper Triassic turbidites of the northern Tethyan Himalaya (Langjiexue group): the terminal of a sediment–routing system sourced in the Gondwanide orogen. Gondwana Research 34, 84–98. Wang, X.X., Zhang, J.J., Yang, X.Y., 2017. Geochemical characteristics of the leucogranites from Gyirong, South Tibet: formation mechanism and tectonic implications. Geotectonica et Metallogenia 41 (2), 354–368 (in Chinese with English abstract). Watson, E.B., Wark, D.A., Thomas, J.B., 2006. Crystallization thermometers for zircon and rutile. Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology 151 (4), 413.

96

H.-W. Cao et al. / Gondwana Research 72 (2019) 83–96

Weinberg, R.F., 2016. Himalayan leucogranites and migmatites: nature, timing and duration of anatexis. Journal of Metamorphic Geology 34, 821–843. Wen, C.Q., Duo, J., Fen, X.P., Chen, H.Q., Hu, X.C., Li, X.W., Zhang, S.X., Liu, W.Z., Sun, Y., Li, B.H., 2006. Geological characteristics and genetic analysis of the Mayoumu gold deposit, Tibet, China. Journal of Chengdu University Technology (Science & Technology Edition) 33, 122–133 (in Chinese with English abstract). Whitehouse, M.J., Platt, J.P., 2003. Dating high–grade metamorphism—constraints from rare–earth elements in zircon and garnet. Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology 145 (1), 61–74. Wiesmayr, G., Grasemann, B., 2002. Eohimalayan fold and thrust belt: Implications for the geodynamic evolution of the NW–Himalaya (India). Tectonics 21 (6). Wu, F.Y., Liu, Z.C., Liu, X.C., Ji, W.Q., 2015. Himalayan leucogranite: Petrogenesis and implications to orogenesis and plateau uplift. Acta Petrologica Sinica 31 (1), 1–36 (in Chinese with English abstract). Xia, D.X., Liu, S.K., 1997. Multiple classification and correlation of the stratigranphy of China (54): Stratigraphy (Lithostratic) of Xizang autonomous region. China Universtiy of Geosciences press, 182–183 pp. Xie, Y., Li, L., Wang, B., Li, G., Liu, H., Li, Y., Dong, S., Zhou, J., 2017. Genesis of the Zhaxikang epithermal Pb–Zn–Sb deposit in southern Tibet, China: evidence for a magmatic link. Ore Geology Reviews 80, 891–909. Xu, Z.Q., Ma, X.X., 2015. The Chinese Phanerozoic gneiss domes: subduction related type, collision related type and combination type of subduction collision. Acta Petrologica Sinica 31 (12), 3509–3523 (in Chinese with English abstract). Xu, Z., Wang, Q., Pêcher, A., Liang, F., Qi, X., Cai, Z., Li, H., Zeng, L., Cao, H., 2013. Orogen– parallel ductile extension and extrusion of the Greater Himalaya in the late Oligocene and Miocene. Tectonics 32, 191–215. Xu, Z.Q., Dilek, Y., Cao, H., Yang, J.S., Robinson, P., Ma, C.Q., Li, H.Q., Jolivet, M., Roger, F., Chen, X.J., 2015. Paleo–Tethyan Evolution of Tibet as Recorded in the East Cimmerides and West Cathaysides. Journal of Asian Earth Sciences 105, 320–337. Yang, Z.S., Hou, Z.Q., Gao, W., Wang, H.P., Li, Z.Q., Meng, X.J., Qu, X.M., 2006. Metallogenic characteristics and genetic model of antimony and gold deposits in South Tibetan Detachment System. Acta Geologica Sinica 80 (9), 1377–1391 (in Chinese with English abstract). Yang, Z., Hou, Z., Meng, X., Liu, Y., Fei, H., Tian, S., Li, Z., Gao, W., 2009. Post–collisional Sb and Au mineralization related to the South Tibetan detachment system, Himalayan orogen. Ore Geology Reviews 36, 194–212. Yin, A., 2000. Mode of Cenozoic east-west extension in Tibet suggesting a common origin of rifts in Asia during the Indo-Asian collision. Journal of Geophysical Research: Solid Earth 105 (B9), 21745–21759. Yin, A., 2006. Cenozoic tectonic evolution of the Himalayan orogen as constrained by along–strike variation of structural geometry, exhumation history, and foreland sedimentation. Earth–Science Reviews 76, 1–2), 1–131. Yin, A., Harrison, T.M., 2000. Geologic evolution of the Himalayan–Tibetan orogen. Annual Review of Earth and Planetary Sciences 28, 211–280. Yin, A., Dubey, C.S., Kelty, T.K., Webb, A.A.G., Harrison, T.M., Chou, C.Y., Célérier, J., 2009. Geologic correlation of the Himalayan orogen and Indian craton: part 2. Structural geology, geochronology, and tectonic evolution of the Eastern Himalaya. Geological Society of America Bulletin 122 (3/4), 360–395. Yu, J.J., Zeng, L.S., Liu, J., 2011. Early Miocene leucogranites in Dingye area, southern Tibet: formation mechanism and tectonic implications. Acta Petrologica Sinica 27 (7), 1961–1972 (in Chinese with English abstract). Zartman, R.E., Doe, B.R., 1981. Plumbotectonics–the model. Tectonophysics 75, 135–162. Zeng, L.S., Liu, J., Gao, L.E., 2009. Early Oligocene crustal anataxis in the Yardoi gnesis dome, Southern Tibet and geological implication. Chinese Science Bulletin 54, 104–112. Zeng, L.S., Gao, L.E., Xie, K., Liu, Z.J., 2011. Mid–Eocene high Sr/Y granites in the Northern Himalayan Gneiss Domes: Melting thickened lower continental crust. Earth and Planetary Science Letters 303, 251–266. Zeng, L.S., Gao, L.E., Tang, S.H., Hou, K.J., Guo, C.L., Hu, G.Y., 2015. Eocene Magmatism in the Tethyan Himalaya, Southern Tibet. Geological Society, London, Special Publications 412, 287–316. Zhai, W., Sun, X., Yi, J., Zhang, X., Mo, R., Zhou, F., Wei, H., Zeng, Q., 2014. Geology, geochemistry, and genesis of orogenic gold–antimony mineralization in the Himalayan Orogen, South Tibet, China. Ore Geology Reviews 58, 68–90. Zhang, G.Y., 2012. Metallogenic Model and Prospecting Potential in Southern Tibet Au–Sb Polymetallic Belt. [PhD Thesis], Wuhan: China University of Geosciences, Wuhan. Zhang, H.F., Harri, S.N., Parrish, R., Zhang, L., Zhao, Z.D., Li, D.W., 2005. Geochemistry of Northern Himalayan leucogranite: regional comparison, petrogenesis and tectonic implications. Earth Science (Journal of China University of Geosciences) 30 (3), 275–288 (in Chinese with English abstract).

Zhang, J.F., Zheng, Y.Y., Zhang, G.Y., Gao, S.B., Ye, X.R., Zhang, Z., Liu, M.Y., Li, J.Q., 2010. Genesis of Zhaxikang Pb-Zn-Sb-Ag deposit in Northern Himalaya: constraints from multi-isotope geochemistry. Earth Science (Journal of China University of Geosciences) 35 (6), 1000–1010 (in Chinese with English abstract). Zhang, J.J., Santosh, M., Wang, X., Guo, L., Yang, X., Zhang, B., 2012. Tectonics of the northern Himalaya since the India–Asia collision. Gondwana Research 21, 939–960. Zhang, C., Li, X., Mattern, F., Mao, G., Zeng, Q., Xu, W., 2015. Deposystem architectures and lithofacies of a submarine fan–dominated deep sea succession in an orogen: a case study from the Upper Triassic Langjiexue Group of southern Tibet. Journal of Asian Earth Sciences 111, 222–243. Zhang, C., Li, X., Mattern, F., Zeng, Q., Mao, G., 2016. Composition and sediment dispersal pattern of the Upper Triassic flysch in the eastern Himalayas, China: significance to provenance and basin analysis. International Journal of Earth Sciences 106, 1257–1276. Zhang, Z., Xiang, H., Dong, X., Li, W., Ding, H., Gou, Z., Tian, Z., 2017. Oligocene HP metamorphism and anatexis of the Higher Himalayan Crystalline Sequence in Yadong region, east–central Himalaya. Gondwana Research 41, 173–187. Zhang, L.K., Li, G.M., Santosh, M., Cao, H.W., Dong, S.L., Zhang, Z., Fu, J.G., Xia, X.B., Huang, Y., Liang, W., Zhang, S.T., 2019. Cambrian magmatism in the Tethys Himalaya and implications for the evolution of the Proto-Tethys along the northern Gondwana margin: a case study and overview. Geological Journal https://doi.org/10.1002/gj.3311. Zheng, S.H., Zhang, Z.F., Ni, B.L., Hou, F.G., Shen, M.Z., 1982. Hydrogen and oxygen isotopic studies of thermal waters in Tibet. Journal of Peking University. 99–106 (in Chinese with English abstract). Zheng, Y.Y., Sun, X., Tian, L.M., Zheng, H.T., Yu, W., Yang, W.T., Zhou, T.C., Yan, X.B., 2014. Mineralization, deposit type and metallogenic age of the gold antimony polymetallic belt in the Eastern part of North Himalayan. Geotectonica et Metallogenia 38 (1), 108–118 (in Chinese with English abstract). Zheng, Y.C., Hou, Z.Q., Fu, Q., Zhu, D.C., Liang, W., Xu, P., 2016. Mantle inputs to Himalayan anatexis: Insights from petrogenesis of the Miocene Langkazi leucogranite and its dioritic enclaves. Lithos 264, 125–140. Zhou, F., Sun, X.M., Zhai, W., Liang, Y.H., Wei, H.X., Mo, R.W., Zhang, X.G., Yi, J.Z., 2011. Geochemistry of ore–forming fluids and metallogenic mechanism for Zhemulang gold deposit in southern Tibet. Acta Petrologica Sinica 27 (9), 2775–2785 (in Chinese with English abstract). Zhou, J., Huang, Z., Zhou, M., Li, X., Jin, Z., 2013. Constraints of C–O–S–Pb isotope compositions and Rb–Sr isotopic age on the origin of the Tianqiao carbonate–hosted Pb–Zn deposit, SW China. Ore Geology Reviews 53, 77–92. Zhu, D.C., Wang, L.Q., Pan, G.T., Mo, X.X., Liao, Z.L., Jiang, X.S., Zhao, Z.D., 2004. Discrimination of OIB-type magma and its significances of basalts from middle Jurassic Zhela Formation in the central belt of Tethyan Himalayas south Tibet. Geological Science and Technology Information 23 (3), 15–24 (in Chinese with English abstract). Zhu, B., Kidd, W.S.F., Rowley, D., Currie, B., Shafique, N., 2005. Age of initiation of the India–Asia collision in the east–central Himalaya. The Journal of Geology 113, 265–285. Zhu, D.C., Pan, G., Mo, X., Liao, Z., Jiang, X., Wang, L., Zhao, Z., 2007. Petrogenesis of volcanic rocks in the Sangxiu Formation, central segment of Tethyan Himalaya: a probable example of plume–lithosphere interaction. Journal of Asian Earth Sciences 29, 320–335. Zhu, D.C., Mo, X.X., Pan, G.T., Zhao, Z.D., Dong, G., Shi, Y., Liao, Z., Wang, L., Zhou, C., 2008. Petrogenesis of the earliest Early Cretaceous mafic rocks from the Cona area of the eastern Tethyan Himalaya in south Tibet: Interaction between the incubating Kerguelen plume and the eastern Greater India lithosphere. Lithos 100, 147–173. Zhu, D.C., Chung, S.L., Mo, X.X., Zhao, Z.D., Niu, Y., Song, B., Yang, Y.H., 2009. The 132 Ma Comei–Bunbury large igneous province: remnants identified in present–day southeastern Tibet and southwestern Australia. Geology 37, 583–586. Zhu, D.C., Zhao, Z.D., Niu, Y., Dilek, Y., Hou, Z.Q., Mo, X.X., 2013. The origin and pre– Cenozoic evolution of the Tibetan Plateau. Gondwana Research 23, 1429–1454. Zhu, D.C., Wang, Q., Zhao, Z.D., Chung, S.L., Cawood, P.A., Niu, Y., Liu, S.A., Wu, F.Y., Mo, X.–. X., 2015. Magmatic record of India–Asia collision. Scientific Reports 5. https://doi.org/ 10.1038/srep14289. Zou, H., Zhang, S.T., Chen, A.Q., Fang, Y., Zeng, Z.F., 2016. Hydrothermal fluid sources of the Fengjia barite–fluorite deposit in southeast Sichuan, China: evidence from fluid inclusions and hydrogen and oxygen isotopes. Resource Geology 66 (1), 24–36. Zou, H., Fang, Y., Zhang, S.T., Zhang, Q., 2017. The source of Fengjia and Langxi barite– fluorite deposits in southeastern Sichuan, China: evidence from rare earth elements and S, Sr, and Sm–Nd isotopic data. Geological Journal 52 (3), 470–488. Zou, H., Cao, H.W., Bagas, L., Zhang, Y.H., Zhang, S.T., Zhang, Q., Liu, H., Li, Y., 2019. Origin of the Mo-bearing Xiaoshuijing Syenogranite in the Tengchong Terrane, SW China. Ore Geology Reviews 105, 258–272.