1. Introduction
Accretionary orogens are among the most complex tectonic environments on Earth. They are structurally segmented (e.g. van Staal et al. Reference van Staal, Barr, Percival, Cook and Clowes2012), lithotectonically heterogeneous (e.g. Monger & Price, Reference Monger and Price1979), often host to multiple intrusive suites (e.g. Li et al. Reference Li, Chung, Wilde, Wang, Xiao and Guo2016) and record various deformation ± reactivation events (e.g. Piette-Lauzière et al. Reference Piette-Lauzière, Larson, Kellett and Graziani2020). The geological histories of such environments are further obfuscated when overprinted by a terminal continent–continent collision (e.g. Hatcher, Reference Hatcher2010).
The southern Asian margin developed as a long-lived accretionary orogen throughout much of the Mesozoic and earliest Cenozoic eras following the breakup of Gondwana and prior to the final closure of the Neo-Tethys ocean (Green et al. Reference Green, Searle, Corfield and Corfield2008) and formation of the Himalayan orogen (Yin & Harrison, Reference Yin and Harrison2000). Rocks of Asian affinity that now dominantly comprise the Tibetan plateau and adjacent portions of the Pamir and Northern Pakistan record a history of terrane accretion along and between a series of sutures ranging from early Paleozoic (Qilian) to Jurassic (Bangong) age (Tapponnier et al. Reference Tapponnier, Zhiqin, Roger, Meyer, Arnaud, Wittlinger and Jingsui2001; Zanchi et al. Reference Zanchi, Gaetani, Angiolini and De Amicis2001). The southern margin of the Asian continent was also the locus of subduction from Late Jurassic to Eocene time where the large-scale, Andean-style continental Ladakh-Gangdese batholith and calc-alkaline volcanic arc developed over 1500 km along the margin (e.g. Schärer et al. Reference Schärer, Xu and Allegre1984). This protracted history of accretion, deformation and magmatism preconditioned the margin prior to its collision with India, laying the foundation for the lithospheric response to subsequent orogenesis. It follows then, that a full understanding of the history of southern Asian rocks is a prerequisite for interpretations about the orogen commonly viewed as the type example of continent–continent collision.
Geological research has a long history across the Tibetan plateau, the Karakoram (Searle et al. Reference Searle, Parrish, Tirrul and Rex1990; Fraser et al. Reference Fraser, Searle, Parrish and Noble2001; Rolland et al. Reference Rolland, Mahéo, Guillot and Pecher2001; Rolland et al. Reference Rolland, Villa, Guillot, Mahéo and Pêcher2006a, Reference Rolland, Carrio-Schaffhauser, Sheppard, Pêcher and Esclauze2006b; Searle et al. Reference Searle, Parrish, Thow, Noble, Phillips and Waters2010; Zanchi & Gaetani, Reference Zanchi and Gaetani2011; Palin et al. Reference Palin, Searle, Waters, Horstwood and Parrish2012) and the Hindu Kush (Gaetani et al. Reference Gaetani, Angiolini, Nicora, Sciunnach, Le Fort, Tanoli and Khan1996; Hildebrand et al. Reference Hildebrand, Noble, Searle and Parrish1998; Zanchi et al. Reference Zanchi, Poli, Fumagalli, Gaetani, Khan, Treloar, Searle and Jan2000; Hildebrand et al. Reference Hildebrand, Noble, Searle, Waters and Parrish2001; Faisal et al. Reference Faisal, Larson, Cottle and Lamming2014; Faisal et al. Reference Faisal, Larson, King and Cottle2016; Faisal et al. Reference Faisal, Larson, Camacho and Coutand2018; Soret et al. Reference Soret, Larson, Cottle, Smit, Johnson, Shrestha, Ali and Faisal2019) and has provided much insight into the pre-Himalayan (>55 Ma) history of the south Asian margin. There remain, however, some portions of the former margin that have not yet been investigated in detail leaving significant gaps in the continuity of knowledge about the southern Asian antecedent. One such place is the Hindu Raj region of north central Pakistan, which encompasses the Yasin and Ishkuman valleys, situated between the Hindu Kush region to the west and the Karakoram region to the east (Fig. 1a). The main geological reports from the area comprise reconnaissance mapping commissioned through the Geological Survey of Pakistan, completed in 1977 and published in 1988 (Ebblin, Reference Ebblin1988), preliminary geological observations to the immediate west of the main Yasin valley by Le Fort and Gaetani (Reference Le Fort and Gaetani1998), local geological observations across northern Pakistan (Jan et al. Reference Jan, Asif, Tahirkheli and Kamal1981) and initial K-Ar (Casnedi et al. Reference Casnedi, Desio, Forcella, Nicoletti and Petrucciani1978) and whole Rb–Sr and geochemical data from the broader region (Debon et al. Reference Debon, Le Fort, Dautel, Sonet and Zimmermann1987).
In this contribution, we present the results of a new geological investigation of specimens collected along the Yasin valley in the Hindu Raj region. This work includes the first monazite U(-Th)-Pb petrochronology, phase equilibria models, apatite U–Pb geochronology and biotite in situ Rb–Sr geochronology from metamorphic rocks the area and the first U–Pb zircon geochronology and trace element geochemical information from plutonic rocks. These new data help close a gap in our understanding of the development of southern Asia in northern Pakistan, between the better studied Hindu Kush and Karakoram regions, and provide additional detailed information about the evolution of the region prior to – and during – India-Kohistan-Asia collision.
2. Geological background
Here we provide a brief summary of previous work in the Hindu Kush, Karakoram and Pamir regions that surround the present study area.
2.a. Hindu Kush region
The Hindu Kush region is mainly underlain by rocks of the Eastern Hindu Kush block (Zanchi et al. Reference Zanchi, Poli, Fumagalli, Gaetani, Khan, Treloar, Searle and Jan2000; Zanchi & Gaetani, Reference Zanchi and Gaetani2011), also variably referred to as the Wakhan zone (Gaetani et al. Reference Gaetani, Angiolini, Nicora, Sciunnach, Le Fort, Tanoli and Khan1996) or part of the Southern Pamir/Hindu Kush terrane (Fig. 1a; Robinson, Reference Robinson2015), which was accreted to the south Asian margin in the Late Triassic Epoch (Faisal et al. Reference Faisal, Larson, Cottle and Lamming2014). The rocks within the Eastern Hindu Kush block are of Gondwanan affinity (Angiolini et al. Reference Angiolini, Zanchi, Zanchetta, Nicora and Vezzoli2013) and typically comprise argillaceous and calcareous protoliths (Zanchi & Gaetani, Reference Zanchi and Gaetani2011) that have been variably metamorphosed to sillimanite-bearing migmatite (Hildebrand et al. Reference Hildebrand, Noble, Searle, Waters and Parrish2001). The tectonometamorphic record preserved in the rocks of the Eastern Hindu Kush block includes ca. 185 Ma accretion of the Karakoram block, which reached pressure-temperature (P-T) conditions of 0.3 GPa and 400–500 °C and the Late Cretaceous docking of the Kohistan island arc (0.6 GPa and 500–600 °C) (Faisal et al. Reference Faisal, Larson, Cottle and Lamming2014; Soret et al. Reference Soret, Larson, Cottle, Smit, Johnson, Shrestha, Ali and Faisal2019). Cenozoic collision-related sillimanite grade rocks reached P-T conditions of 0.7–0.8 GPa and 700–750 °C in the late Eocene-early Oligocene while those at staurolite grade experienced 0.6 GPa and 580–600 °C at the same time (Soret et al. Reference Soret, Larson, Cottle, Smit, Johnson, Shrestha, Ali and Faisal2019). The region is also host to a series of rift-related structures and intrusions (ca. 500–480 Ma – Kafiristan) and pre-collision subduction-related granodiorites (ca. 123–127 Ma – Tirich Mir). Localised post-collision anatectic leucogranites are seen in the ca. 24 Ma Gharam Chasma biotite + muscovite ± garnet ± tourmaline leucogranite (Hildebrand et al. Reference Hildebrand, Noble, Searle and Parrish1998; Hildebrand et al. Reference Hildebrand, Noble, Searle, Waters and Parrish2001; Heuberger et al. Reference Heuberger, Schaltegger, Burg, Villa, Frank, Dawood, Hussain and Zanchi2007; Faisal et al. Reference Faisal, Larson, King and Cottle2016). Gharam Chasma crystallization is synchronous with the early stages of the large Baltoro granite batholith in the Central and Eastern Karakoram (Rex et al. Reference Rex, Searle, Tirrul, Crawford, Prior, Rex, Barnicoat and Bertrand1988; Searle, Reference Searle1991; Searle et al. Reference Searle, Crawford and Rex1992; Searle et al. Reference Searle, Parrish, Thow, Noble, Phillips and Waters2010).
The Eastern Hindu Kush block is separated from the adjacent Karakoram block to the south by the Tirich Mir boundary zone (Hildebrand et al. Reference Hildebrand, Searle, Khan and Van Heijst2000), which is marked by peridotite and metagabbro (Zanchi et al. Reference Zanchi, Poli, Fumagalli, Gaetani, Khan, Treloar, Searle and Jan2000). The rocks of the Karakoram block to the south-east of the Tirich Mir boundary zone in the Hindu Kush region can be divided into the Karakoram Northern sedimentary belt and Southern sedimentary belt, which comprise low metamorphic grade slate + limestone and argillaceous + siliciclastic + carbonate-rich phyllite/chert/breccia, respectively (Hildebrand et al. Reference Hildebrand, Searle, Khan and Van Heijst2000). Like those in the Eastern Hindu Kush block, the rocks of the Karakoram block also host 110–108 Ma subduction-related plutons (110–108 Ma Buni Zom; Faisal et al. Reference Faisal, Larson, King and Cottle2016; ca. 104 Ma Phargam; Heuberger et al. Reference Heuberger, Schaltegger, Burg, Villa, Frank, Dawood, Hussain and Zanchi2007).
2.b. Karakoram region
The Karakoram region to the east of the Hindu Raj contains rocks of the Karakoram block. The Hunza and Baltoro (Fig. 1a) portions of the Karakoram region record complex, protracted and spatially distinct histories of high-grade metamorphism and magmatism. The broader region is host to the >700 km long Karakoram batholith, which comprises pre-collisional subduction-related granodiorites and granites, some metamorphosed to amphibolite-facies, that range in age from ca. 200 to 80 Ma (Searle et al. Reference Searle, Parrish, Tirrul and Rex1990 and references therein; Crawford & Searle, Reference Crawford and Searle1992). In the Baltoro region, U–Pb dating of granitoids indicates that the Baltoro granite component of the Karakoram batholith intruded between ca. 27 and 13 Ma (Searle et al. Reference Searle, Parrish, Thow, Noble, Phillips and Waters2010). Regional low-pressure andalusite-biotite ± sillimanite metamorphism associated with pluton emplacement is interpreted to have occurred in the southern Baltoro Karakoram and Hunza valley region at ca. 106 Ma, followed by regional sillimanite-grade metamorphism at ca. 82–44 Ma (Fraser et al. Reference Fraser, Searle, Parrish and Noble2001; Foster et al. Reference Foster, Gibson, Parrish, Horstwood, Fraser and Tindle2002; Foster et al. Reference Foster, Parrish, Horstwood, Chenery, Pyle and Gibson2004) and a kyanite-grade metamorphic overprint at ca. 28 Ma (0.78 GPa and 645 °C) (Palin et al. Reference Palin, Searle, Waters, Horstwood and Parrish2012). This contrasts with post ca. 21.8 Ma kyanite-grade (0.74–0.80 GPa and 640–660 °C) metamorphism recorded in the Baltoro region that was driven by conductive heating following post-collisional crustal thickening (Searle & Tirrule, Reference Searle and Tirrule1991; Palin et al. Reference Palin, Searle, Waters, Horstwood and Parrish2012).
The Dassu-Askole region of the Karakoram, to the south and east of the Baltoro region (Fig. 1a), contains amphibolite facies metamorphism (0.7 GPa and 700 °C) associated with Paleogene (55–37 Ma) crustal thickening (Rolland et al. Reference Rolland, Mahéo, Guillot and Pecher2001). A younger, higher temperature but lower pressure (∼775–850 °C and 0.5–0.6 GPa; Rolland et al. Reference Rolland, Mahéo, Guillot and Pecher2001; Rolland et al. Reference Rolland, Carrio-Schaffhauser, Sheppard, Pêcher and Esclauze2006b) event is also recorded in domal culminations (Dassu and Askole) in the area (Searle, Reference Searle1991). Monazite from sillimanite-bearing orthogneiss in the core of the Dassu dome are as young as ca. 5.4 Ma (Fraser et al. Reference Fraser, Searle, Parrish and Noble2001; Searle et al. Reference Searle, Parrish, Thow, Noble, Phillips and Waters2010), while zircon and monazite from a tourmaline pegmatite are even younger at ca. 3.5 Ma (Searle et al. Reference Searle, Parrish, Thow, Noble, Phillips and Waters2010).
2.c. Pamir
The rocks of the Southern Pamir appear to be related to those in the Karakoram (Angiolini et al. Reference Angiolini, Zanchi, Zanchetta, Nicora and Vezzoli2013) and are separated from the North and Central Pamir by the Rushan – Pshart suture zone (Fig. 1a; Schwab et al. Reference Schwab, Ratschbacher, Siebel, McWilliams, Minaev, Lutkov, Chen, Stanek, Nelson, Frisch and Wooden2004; Robinson et al. Reference Robinson, Ducea and Lapen2012; Hacker et al. Reference Hacker, Ratschbacher, Rutte, Stearns, Malz, Stübner, Kylander-Clark, Pfänder and Everson2017; Searle & Hacker, Reference Searle, Hacker, Treloar and Searle2019). A series of thrust sheets and metamorphic domes, such as the large Shakhdara dome, record crustal thickening and regional metamorphism from 37 to 20 Ma, concomitant with thickening and metamorphism along the Karakoram (see Hacker et al. Reference Hacker, Ratschbacher, Rutte, Stearns, Malz, Stübner, Kylander-Clark, Pfänder and Everson2017; Searle & Hacker, Reference Searle, Hacker, Treloar and Searle2019 and references therein). Late strike-slip faults, such as the Kilik fault (Zanchi & Gaetani, Reference Zanchi and Gaetani2011), the possible eastern extension of the Tirich Mir boundary zone (Hildebrand et al. Reference Hildebrand, Searle, Khan and Van Heijst2000; Zanchi et al. Reference Zanchi, Poli, Fumagalli, Gaetani, Khan, Treloar, Searle and Jan2000; Robinson, Reference Robinson2015) cut through the Hindu Kush and southern Pamir during Cenozoic indentation of the Pamir.
The rocks of the Southern Pamir, like those of the Hindu Kush and the Karakoram, comprise a basement of Gondwanan affinity (Angiolini et al. Reference Angiolini, Zanchi, Zanchetta, Nicora and Vezzoli2013) that host subduction-related Cretaceous plutonic rocks (Schwab et al. Reference Schwab, Ratschbacher, Siebel, McWilliams, Minaev, Lutkov, Chen, Stanek, Nelson, Frisch and Wooden2004; Stübner et al. Reference Stübner, Ratschbacher, Weise, Chow, Hofmann, Khan, Rutte, Sperner, Pfänder, Hacker, Dunkl, Tichomirowa and Stearns2013). The metamorphic record in the region is distinct and dominated by rocks deeply exhumed within large domal culminations where conditions of 0.7–1.5 GPa and 700–800 °C were reached (Schmidt et al. Reference Schmidt, Hacker, Ratschbacher, Stübner, Stearns, Kylander-Clark, Cottle, Alexander, Webb, Gehrels and Minaev2011; Hacker et al. Reference Hacker, Ratschbacher, Rutte, Stearns, Malz, Stübner, Kylander-Clark, Pfänder and Everson2017). Titanite dates from amphibolite within the Shakdhara dome, the largest dome in the southern Pamir, range between 34 ± 4.6 and ca. 10 Ma, which overlaps with garnet Lu-Hf dates from the same lithology (ca. 37 Ma) and monazite from proximal paragneiss and leucocratic gneiss (30–18 Ma)(Stearns et al. Reference Stearns, Hacker, Ratschbacher, Rutte and Kylander-Clark2015; Hacker et al. Reference Hacker, Ratschbacher, Rutte, Stearns, Malz, Stübner, Kylander-Clark, Pfänder and Everson2017).
2.d. Hindu Raj
The Hindu Raj range is situated between the Hindu Kush region to the west and Karakoram region to the east. Two major valleys transect the range, the Yasin River in the west which rises from the Darkot pass and the Ishkuman – Karambar River which extends north as far as the Wakhan corridor (Afghanistan) (Fig. 1b). A northern sedimentary belt is dominated by a thick, mainly carbonate sequence ranging from Permian to Cretaceous in age (Casnedi, Reference Casnedi1979; Ebblin, Reference Ebblin1988; Zanchi et al. Reference Zanchi, Gaetani, Angiolini and Deamicis2001). A central granitoid belt extends from the Darkot pass east to the Hunza Karakoram and comprises both pre-collision granodiorites and monzogranites and post-collision leucogranite dykes (Debon et al. Reference Debon, Le Fort, Dautel, Sonet and Zimmermann1987). A distinct alkali granite, including amphibole and pyroxene-bearing syenite and quartz syenite, approximately 20 km, long has been mapped along the Karakoram batholith in the Karambar valley (Koz Sar complex; Debon & Khan, Reference Debon and Khan1996) (Koz Sar complex; Debon & Khan, Reference Debon and Khan1996). These rocks are similar to the Hemasil syenite in the southern Baltoro Karakoram (Mahéo et al. Reference Mahéo, Blichert-Toft, Pin, Guillot and Pecher2009) and are geochemically related to a suite of lamprophyre dykes intruding the Baltoro Karakoram region (Rex et al. Reference Rex, Searle, Tirrul, Crawford, Prior, Rex, Barnicoat and Bertrand1988; Searle, Crawford & Rex, Reference Searle, Crawford and Rex1992; Searle et al. Reference Searle, Parrish, Thow, Noble, Phillips and Waters2010). The Koz Sar monzonites have a Rb–Sr isochron age of 88 ± 4 Ma (Debon & Khan, Reference Debon and Khan1996). If this age marks an intrusive age, then alkaline magmatism accompanied the calc-alkaline granites of the Hunza plutionc unit. The Koz Sar syenites are also petrologically similar to a suite of alkaline intrusives along the southern Pamir region (Searle & Hacker, Reference Searle, Hacker, Treloar and Searle2019). These syenites and lamprophyres in the Baltoro and Pamir regions have been interpreted as mantle-derived melts intruding at approximately the same time as the Baltoro-type crustal melt granites (Searle et al. Reference Searle, Crawford and Rex1992; Searle et al. Reference Searle, Parrish, Thow, Noble, Phillips and Waters2010).
An additional granitic batholith, the subduction-related Ghamu Bar pluton (Debon et al. Reference Debon, Le Fort, Dautel, Sonet and Zimmermann1987) extends into the Hindu Raj region from the west (Fig. 1b) and occurs within variably metamorphosed sedimentary rocks. Metamorphism within these zone reaches sillimanite grade (Ebblin, Reference Ebblin1988). The southern margin of the Hindu Raj is marked by the Shyok suture zone which is the northern margin of the Kohistan island arc (Fig. 1b).
The absolute timing of metamorphism in the area is unknown. High-metamorphic grade rocks are observed to be spatially associated with granodiorite, also of unknown age, but inferred to be related to similar rocks farther to the south-west that yield zircon dates between ca. 110 and 102 Ma (Heuberger et al. Reference Heuberger, Schaltegger, Burg, Villa, Frank, Dawood, Hussain and Zanchi2007; Faisal et al. Reference Faisal, Larson, King and Cottle2016). At least two regional folding events are reported with F1, which records N-S maximal finite strain, dominant over F2 with a near vertical maximal finite strain (Ebblin, Reference Ebblin1988).
3. Methods
3.a. Field mapping
Six days of vehicle-supported field mapping along the Yasin and Ishkuman valleys was carried out in the Spring of 2018. Spatial relationships between geological lithologies were recorded and documented along with measurements of geological structures. A suite of representative specimens was collected for further laboratory analyses.
3.b. EPMA
Mineral compositions were obtained at the Fipke Laboratory for Trace Element Research (FiLTER; University of British Columbia Okanagan) using a Cameca SXFiveFE electron microprobe analyser (EMPA). Operating conditions include an excitation voltage of 15 kV, a beam current of 20 nA, a peak count time of 30 s with a background count time of 15 s and a focused spot size of 5 μm. Unfiltered data including the standards, X-ray lines and crystals used are provided in Tables S1 and S2. For all applicable phases, Fe3+was calculated on the basis of charge-balance using the software AX (Holland & Powell, Reference Holland and Powell2009).
3.c. Automated mineralogy
The modal abundances of phases in thin section were determined by an automated mineralogy routine that integrated backscattered electron (BSE) and energy-dispersive X-ray (EDS) signals (Gottlieb et al. Reference Gottlieb, Wilkie, Sutherland, Ho-Tun, Suthers, Perera, Jenkins, Spencer, Butcher and Rayner2000). Thin sections were analysed at Vidence Inc., Burnaby, Canada, using a Hitachi SU3900 scanning electron microscope fitted with a single large area (60 mm2) Bruker SDD energy-dispersive spectrometer and running the AMICS automated mineralogy package. BSE brightness was calibrated against quartz, gold and copper standards.
3.d. P-T determination
Phase diagrams were calculated using the petrological modelling software Theriak–Domino (de Capitani & Petrakakis, Reference de Capitani and Petrakakis2010). Sample specific bulk compositions (Appendix S2) were constructed by integrating modal phase abundances for the thin sections with mineral chemistry (Palin et al. Reference Palin, Weller, Waters and Dyck2016). Modelling was undertaken in the MnO–Na2O–CaO–K2O–FeO–MgO–Al2O3–SiO2–H2O–TiO2–O2(MnNCKFMASHTO) chemical system using the internally consistent thermodynamic dataset ds-55 of Holland and Powell (Reference Holland and Powell1998) (updated to August 2004) and activity–composition relations for melt, biotite and ilmenite (White et al. Reference White, Powell and Holland2007), feldspar (Holland & Powell, Reference Holland and Powell2003), white mica (Coggon & Holland, Reference Coggon and Holland2002) and garnet (White et al. Reference White, Powell and Holland2007). Dataset ds-55 was chosen over the more recent ds-62 because it better predicted the observed mineral assemblages, and in particular, the composition and stability of garnet in our samples (c.f., Dyck et al. Reference Dyck, Waters, St-Onge and Searle2020; Dyck et al. Reference Dyck, Goddard, Wallis, Hansen and Martel2021). The amount of water was set to minimally saturate the assemblage in the immediate sub-solidus at 0.7 GPa. Bulk rock XFe3+ = Fe3+/(Fetotal) was set for each sample and is a function of the Fe3+ determined for all ferric minerals by stoichiometric charge balance. Garnet isomodes and end-member isopleths were generated from the output of a 50 × 50 gridded Gibb’s free energy minimization calculation (pixelmap) and contoured in Matlab. Uncertainty on the absolute positions of phase assemblage boundaries in pressure–temperature space for our choice of dataset and activity–composition models generally do not exceed ±20–30 °C and ± 0.05 GPa at 1σ (Powell & Holland, Reference Powell and Holland2008; Palin et al. Reference Palin, Weller, Waters and Dyck2016).
We used the average PT (avPT) function in thermocalc (versions tc333 with ds-55; Powell & Holland, Reference Powell and Holland1994) and the Ti-in-biotite thermometer of Henry et al. (Reference Henry, Guidotti and Thomson2005) to independently verify the metamorphic conditions determined using the phase diagrams results. The 1σ uncertainty for avPT calculations is expressed as an error ellipse, the dimension of which scales with the collective fit of the end-member reactions (Powell & Holland, Reference Powell and Holland1994). We report all Ti-in-biotite temperatures with ± 24 ºC uncertainty (Henry et al. Reference Henry, Guidotti and Thomson2005).
3.e. U(-Th)-Pb geochronology
3.e.1. Metamorphic specimens
3.e.1.a. Monazite
Monazite in selected metamorphic rocks collected during fieldwork was analysed in situ for U(-Th)-Pb geochronology and trace element concentrations in the FiLTER facility via laser ablation inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (LA-ICP-MS) using a Photon Machines Analyte 193 Excimer laser paired with an Agilent 8900 triple quadrupole instrument run in single quadrupole mode. ICP-MS signal was optimized for maximum signal using the glass reference material NIST610 (Jochum et al. Reference Jochum, Weis, Stoll, Kuzmin, Yang, Raczek, Jacob, Stracke, Birbaum, Frick, Günther and Enzweiler2011) and minimal oxide and doubly charged ion production (<1%), while maintaining 238U/232Th within 3% of target values. A laser spot size of 12 microns was used with a repetition rate of 6 Hz and an estimated fluence of 3.5 J/cm2. All spots were pre-ablated with two laser pulses followed by 35 s of background signal collection and 25 s of ablation. Instrument drift through analytical sessions and downhole fractionation was monitored through analysis of matrix-matched reference monazite bracketing every ∼10 unknown laser spots. Analysis and correction for both were performed using Iolite v. 4.5 (Paton et al. Reference Paton, Woodhead, Hellstrom, Hergt, Greig and Maas2010, Reference Paton, Hellstrom, Paul, Woodhead and Hergt2011). Excess dispersion for each radiogenic ratio of interest was calculated based on assumed homogeneity of secondary reference monazites that were also analysed bracketing the unknowns. Calculated excess dispersion, typically <1%, was propagated in quadrature through the ratios of all analyses for the associated run. All data are uncorrected for common Pb. The full datasets collected are presented in Tables S2 and S4.
Monazite “44069” – 206Pb/238U date of 424.9 ± 0.4 Ma (Aleinikoff et al. Reference Aleinikoff, Schenck, Plank, Srogi, Fanning, Kamo and Bosbyshell2006) – was used as the primary reference during the two monazite analytical sessions with ‘Bananeira’ and ‘554’ monazite analysed as secondary reference materials. Bananeira, also referred to as ‘Stern’, returned 207Pb corrected (Stacey & Kramers, Reference Stacey and Kramers1975) 206Pb/238U dates of 507 ± 4 Ma (mean squared weighted deviation – MSWD = 0.39, n = 8/10) and 514 ± 6 Ma (MSWD = 2.1, n = 16/16), which overlap reported dates of 512 ± 2 Ma (Palin et al. Reference Palin, Searle, Waters, Parrish, Roberts, Horstwood, Yeh, Chung and Anh2013) and 508 ± 1 Ma (Kylander-Clark et al. Reference Kylander-Clark, Hacker and Cottle2013). The 208Pb/232Th dates returned from the two analytical runs of Bananeira are 493 ± 4 Ma (MSWD = 1.8, n = 8/10) and 508 ± 4 Ma (MSWD = 1.5, n = 14/16), respectively. Both dates are within the estimated reproducibility of the laser ablation method (2%; Horstwood et al. Reference Horstwood, Košler, Gehrels, Jackson, McLean, Paton, Pearson, Sircombe, Sylvester, Vermeesch, Bowring, Condon and Schoene2016) of a reported, but overdispersed 232Th/208Pb date (LA-ICP-MS) of 497 ± 2 Ma (MSWD = 6.1; Kylander-Clark et al. Reference Kylander-Clark, Hacker and Cottle2013). Monazite 554 returned 207Pb corrected (Stacey & Kramers, Reference Stacey and Kramers1975) 206Pb/238U dates of 45 ± 3 Ma (MSWD = 1.4, n = 9/10) and 49.8 ± 1.8 Ma (MSWD = 1.6, n = 15/16) and 208Pb/232Th dates of 46.9 ± 0.4 (MSWD = 0.31, n = 10/10) and 46.2 ± 0.3 Ma (MSWD = 2.5, n = 14/16). All dates fall within the range of published dates including a 208Pb/232Th date of 45.0 ± 1.3 Ma (M. Tatsumoto, as cited in Harrison et al. Reference Harrison, Grove, McKeegan, Coath, Lovera and Le Fort1999), and 206Pb/238U dates of ∼44.3–50.8 Ma (multi-step thermal ionization mass spectrometry; Peterman et al. Reference Peterman, Mattinson and Hacker2012).
Monazite trace element data were collected from the same ablated volume as the U-Th-Pb isotopes. Bananeira was used as the matrix-matched primary reference material for trace element concentrations using the values reported in Kylander-Clark et al. (Reference Kylander-Clark, Hacker and Cottle2013) with stoichiometric P employed as the internal calibrant for the unknown analyses. Previous studies have estimated a reproducible accuracy of ∼5% for repeat analyses of secondary reference monazites (Cottle et al. Reference Cottle, Lederer and Larson2019). In the present work, we do not use the absolute values of trace elements for interpretations, but instead examine the relative changes between analyses
3.e.1.b. Apatite
Analysis of apatite for U–Pb geochronology was also carried out in FiLTER using the same instrumentation as the monazite analysis. It follows the basic procedure outlined above for instrument tuning, unknown bracketing and drift/downhole fractionation corrections. A laser spot size of 40 microns at a repetition of 8 Hz and an estimated fluence of 4 J/cm2 was used for all analyses. The apatite MCR1 (153.3 ± 0.2 Ma isochron date; Apen et al. Reference Apen, Wall, Cottle, Schmitz, Kylander-Clark and Seward2022) was used as the primary reference apatite, with MAD (Thomson et al. Reference Thomson, Gehrels, Ruiz and Buchwaldt2012; 487 ± 1 to 467 ± 9 Ma; Apen et al. Reference Apen, Wall, Cottle, Schmitz, Kylander-Clark and Seward2022) and Mount McClure (523.5 ± 1.5 Ma; Schoene & Bowring, Reference Schoene and Bowring2006) apatite analysed as matrix-matched secondary reference materials. Repeat analysis of MAD returned a 207Pb corrected (Stacey & Kramers, Reference Stacey and Kramers1975) 206Pb/238U date of 481 ± 2 Ma (MSWD = 1.4, n = 12/12), while Mount McClure yielded an overdispersed Tera-Wasserburg intercept date of 525 ± 8 Ma (MSWD = 11, n = 11/12). The full apatite U–Pb dataset is presented in Table S5.
3.e.2. Plutonic specimens
A total of four plutonic specimens, Y7, 9, 10 and 12, from the study area were crushed and separated following standard procedures for accessory mineral geochronology and geochemistry. Of those specimens, Y7 returned titanite and zircon (only zircon was targeted), Y9 yielded monazite and zircon and Y10 produced only zircon. No datable accessory minerals were extracted from specimen Y12.
Zircon U–Pb dates and trace element data were acquired at the University of California Santa Barbara using a laser ablation split stream system consisting of a Photon Machines Excimer 193 nm laser ablation unit coupled to a Nu Instruments, ‘Nu Plasma 3D’ multi-collector ICP-MS (U, Th and Pb isotopes) and an Agilent 7700S quadrupole ICP-MS (trace elements), using methods of Kylander-Clark et al. (Reference Kylander-Clark, Hacker and Cottle2013) with modifications as outlined in McKinney et al. (Reference McKinney, Cottle and Lederer2015). Samples were analysed for 20 s using a fluence of 1.5 J cm–2, a frequency of 4 Hz and spot size of 20 μm diameter resulting in crater depths of ∼9 μm. Using a standard-sample bracketing technique, reference zircons with known isotopic compositions were analysed before and after each set of eight unknown analyses. Data reduction, including corrections for baseline, instrumental drift, mass bias, downhole fractionation, age and trace element concentration calculations were carried out using Iolite v. 4.1 (Paton et al. Reference Paton, Woodhead, Hellstrom, Hergt, Greig and Maas2010). Zircon U–Th/Pb and trace element data were normalized to 91500 zircon (1062.4 Ma 206Pb/238U ID-TIMS age; Wiedenbeck et al. Reference Wiedenbeck, Hanchar, Peck, Sylvester, Valley, Whitehouse, Kronz, Morishita, Nasdala, Fiebig, Franchi, Girard, Greenwood, Hinton, Kita, Mason, Norman, Ogasawara, Piccoli, Rhede, Satoh, Schulz-Dobrick, Skår, Spicuzza, Terada, Tindle, Togashi, Vennemann, Xie and Zheng2004 – trace element values from GeoREM as of December 2022). A 207Pb-based correction method was utilized using a common-Pb composition derived from the single-stage model of Stacey and Kramers (Reference Stacey and Kramers1975) at the inferred crystallization age. The uncertainty on the 207Pb corrected age incorporates uncertainties on the measured 206Pb/238U and 207Pb/206Pb ratios as well as a 1% uncertainty on the assumed common lead composition. Plešovice (Sláma et al. Reference Sláma, Košler, Condon, Crowley, Gerdes, Hanchar, Horstwood, Morris, Nasdala, Norberg, Schaltegger, Schoene, Tubrett and Whitehouse2008), with an expected 206Pb/238U date of 337.13 ± 37 Ma, and GJ1 (Jackson et al. Reference Jackson, Pearson, Griffin and Belousova2004), with an expected 206Pb/238U date of 601.86 ± 0.37 Ma (Horstwood et al. Reference Horstwood, Košler, Gehrels, Jackson, McLean, Paton, Pearson, Sircombe, Sylvester, Vermeesch, Bowring, Condon and Schoene2016), were analysed as secondary reference zircons, and returned weighted mean 206Pb/238U dates of 337 ± 1 Ma (MSWD = 0.62, n = 17/18) and 601 ± 2 Ma (MSWD = 0.75, n = 18/18), respectively. Trace element concentrations for GJ-1 are accurate to within 5% of the reference values. All uncertainties are quoted at the 95% confidence or 2 sigma level and include contributions from the external reproducibility of the primary reference material for the 207Pb/206Pb and 206Pb/238U ratios. The full zircon U–Pb dataset is provided in Table S6.
3.f. 87Rb/87Sr geochronology
In situ Rb–Sr geochronology was carried out in the FiLTER facility at UBCO following the procedures outlined in Hogmalm et al. (Reference Hogmalm, Zack, Karlsson, Sjöqvist and Garbe-Schönberg2017), Redaa et al. (Reference Redaa, Farkaš, Gilbert, Collins, Wade, Löhr, Zack and Garbe-Schönberg2021), and Rösel and Zack (Reference Rösel and Zack2022) and those detailed in Larson et al. (Reference Larson, Button, Shrestha and Camacho2023). An ESL NWR193 laser with a TwoVol3 ablation cell paired with an Agilent 8900 triple quadrupole inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometer (QQQ-ICP-MS) was used for the analyses. The collision cell in the QQQ-ICP-MS was charged with N2O gas (∼25 ml/min). The ablation cell He carrier gas (0.35 l/min) was mixed with the Ar sample gas (0.9 l/min) through an in-house signal smoothing device before entering the plasma. A laser spot-size diameter of 50 microns was used for all analyses with a repetition rate of 10 Hz and a ∼4 J/cm2 fluence; spots were ablated for 25 s followed by a 20 s washout. All spot locations were pre-ablated with two laser pulses to ensure a clean surface.
A specimen bracketing technique was employed to monitor and correct for instrument drift over the analytical session. The pressed nano-powder, Mica Mg (Zack & Hogmalm, Reference Zack and Hogmalm2016; Hogmalm et al. Reference Hogmalm, Zack, Karlsson, Sjöqvist and Garbe-Schönberg2017), was analysed as the primary standard every ∼10 unknowns, while analyses of NIST610 glass were used to correct final 87Sr/86Sr. Two phlogopite specimens (1B and 1O) and the nano-pressed powder Mica Fe (Rösel & Zack, Reference Rösel and Zack2022) were analysed as unknowns. Phlogopite 1B (initial 87Sr/86Sr intercept of 0.7035; Camacho et al. Reference Camacho, Lee, Zhao, Abdu, Fayek and Creaser2020) yields an isochron date of 978 ± 15 Ma (MSWD = 0.4, n = 7/11). Phlogopite 1O was collected from the same outcrop as 1B and returned an isochron date of 986 ± 18 (MSWD = 0.1, n = 11/11). Both dates overlap the two-point Rb–Sr isochron of 986 ± 5 Ma reported in Camacho et al. (Reference Camacho, Lee, Zhao, Abdu, Fayek and Creaser2020) for 1O and 990 ± 5 Ma reported in Camacho et al. (Reference Camacho, Lee, Fitz Gerald, Zhao, Abdu, Jenkins, Hawthorne, Kyser, Creaser, Armstrong and Heaman2012) for 1B. Analyses of the pressed nano-powder Mica Fe yield an isochron date of 303 ± 3 Ma (initial 87Sr/86Sr intercept of 0.7260; Rösel & Zack, Reference Rösel and Zack2022 – MSWD = 0.26, n = 10/10), which overlaps with a reported weighted mean of Rb–Sr spot dates of 305 ± 2 Mica Fe (Rösel & Zack, Reference Rösel and Zack2022). The full Rb–Sr dataset is included in Table S7.
4. Results
4.a. Field observations
The northern most part of the study area is dominated by intercalated phyllite and psammite (Fig. 2a). Metamorphic grade increases to the south towards the Ghamu Bar pluton (Fig. 1b) where the rock outcrops comprise orthogneiss, quartzofeldspathic gneiss (Fig. 2b) and amphibolite. Metamorphism near pluton contact reaches sillimanite-grade (see description of specimens Y5 and Y3DD below).
Near its contact with the country rocks, the Ghamu Bar pluton is massive in character (Fig. 2c) with a moderate foliation (Fig. 2d bottom). Farther towards the pluton’s center the rocks are not foliated (Fig. 2d top). Large (centimetre-sized) K-feldspar phenocrysts are found in both the foliated margin and undeformed centre of the pluton (Fig. 2d).
Rocks south of the Ghamu Bar pluton comprise a sedimentary succession affected by sub-greenschist facies metamorphism. The lithologies are dominated by slate (Fig. 2e), quartzite and mixed siliciclastic packages. Moreover, the structural characteristics of the rocks south of the pluton are dominated by meso-scale folding and faulting; both of which typically verge to the south (Fig. 2f).
The geology south of the Shyok suture (Fig. 1b) was not examined in detail. A few specimens of plutonic rocks (see descriptions below) were collected to compare with those collected from the Ghamu Bar pluton.
4.b. Petrology
4.b.1. Metamorphic Specimens
Two specimens, Y5 and Y3DD, were chosen to determine the metamorphic history of the region based on their higher variance mineral assemblages. Specimen Y5 is an orthogneiss with plagioclase (∼69 %), biotite (∼20 %), quartz (∼5 %), garnet (∼ 4%) and minor sillimanite, ilmenite, Fe-oxide, cordierite/white mica and chlorite (Fig. 3a). Based on a 11-oxygen calculation, biotite contains Ti = 0.19 apfu (atoms per formula unit) and has a XMg = Mg/(Mg+Fe2+) = 0.42 (Table 1). Garnet are subhedral and contain inclusions of quartz that do not define an internal fabric (Fig. 3a, c). EMPA line profiles across garnet reveal a flat chemical profile, with a composition of Alm0.76Prp0.18Sps0.03Grs0.03 (Table 1), for which Alm = almandine = Fe2+/(Fe2++Mg+Ca+Mn), Prp = pryrope = Mg/(Fe2++Mg+Ca+Mn), Sps = spessartine = Mn/(Fe2++Mg+Ca+Mn) and Grs = grossular = Ca/(Fe2++Mg+Ca+Mn). White mica-rich pseudomorphs after cordierite form lensoidal domains that are aligned with the gneissosity (Fig. 3d).
Specimen Y3DD is foliated meta-granite with quartz (∼41 %), plagioclase (∼21 %), white mica (∼16 %) and minor K-feldspar, sillimanite, ilmenite and garnet (Fig. 3b). Clasts of plagioclase are wrapped by ribbons of quartz and aluminous folia of biotite, sillimanite and white mica (Fig. 3e). The aluminous folia are overgrown, in part, by radial clots of muscovite (Fig. 3f). There are few garnet grains present in this specimen, and all of them are highly fractured and intergrown with fine-grained white mica and biotite (Fig. 3g). Rims of biotite are decorated by fine-grained clusters of ilmenite (Fig. 3h). Analysis of biotite cores yields Ti = 0.19 apfu and a XMg = 0.42, based on a 22-oxygen formula unit (Table 1).
4.b.2. Plutonic specimens
A total of four specimens were collected for accessory mineral U–Pb geochronology to provide information about the timing of pluton emplacement and deformation in the region. Specimen Y7 was collected from the Karakoram block, while specimens Y9, Y10 and Y12 were collected from the Kohistan arc, south of the Shyok suture (Fig. 1b).
Specimen Y7 was sampled from the northern margin of the Ghamu Bar pluton (Debon et al. Reference Debon, Le Fort, Dautel, Sonet and Zimmermann1987), also referred to as Gamughal (Jan et al. Reference Jan, Asif, Tahirkheli and Kamal1981) or Ghamubar (Le Fort & Gaetani, Reference Le Fort and Gaetani1998), and comprises a K-feldspar + plagioclase + biotite + quartz granodiorite with accessory zircon and titanite (Fig. 4a). It is characterized by K-feldspar megacrysts up to 2 cm in length. The specimen collected and analysed is foliated; however, the same lithology was also observed where it is unfoliated and intruded locally by a garnet-bearing leucogranite.
Specimen Y9, collected from the leucocratic phase of the Gindai pluton (Jan et al. Reference Jan, Asif, Tahirkheli and Kamal1981), is a K-feldspar + plagioclase + quartz + biotite leucogranite with accessory monazite and zircon. The main minerals are broadly equigranular and medium to coarse in size; no foliation is apparent (Fig. 4b). Specimens Y10 and Y12 were collected from a larger pluton body south of Y9. Both specimens are granodiorite with a mineral assemblage of plagioclase + amphibole + biotite + quartz (Fig. 4c, d); no foliation is apparent. While Y10 yielded accessory zircon after crushing and separation, Y12 was barren.
4.c. Geochronology
4.c.1. Orthogneiss Monazite U(-Th)-Pb
Monazite in specimens Y3DD and Y5 were analysed for U–Th–Pb geochronology to provide information on the timing of metamorphism in the study area. Nine monazite grains in Y3DD were located and mapped for Y, Th, Ca, Si and U distribution to assess elemental zonation and to help guide laser spot placement. With one notable exception, most grains are roughly equidimensional and 30–50 μm across (Fig. S1). Y and Th zonation within monazite cores is generally patchy with some limited sector zoning; thin (≤5 μm) homogeneously high Y or low Y rims are also evident (Fig. S1). All grains are inclusion free except the largest grain analysed, which contained ∼5 μm diameter xenotime inclusions within its core.
One hundred and two monazite analyses across all 9 grains yield a spread in 232Th-208Pb dates from 126 ± 11 Ma to 66.1 ± 3.5 Ma (Fig. 5a) with the bulk of the analyses falling between ca. 85 and 70 Ma. Heavy rare earth element (HREE) concentrations vary with date with older analyses generally having flatter HREE slopes (lower Gd/Yb) and younger dates trending towards steeper HREE slopes (higher Gd/Yb) (Fig. 5c). That trend is followed by relative Eu anomalies, which are highest in the oldest spots and progressively decrease with younger dates (Fig. 4c).
The monazite in Y5 is equant to elongate (up to 2:1) with long axes between 10 and 70 μm (Fig. S2). They are characterized by core and rim internal structures with core regions variably displaying homogeneous, patchy or sector zoning in Y and Th. Grain rims are between ∼1 and 5 μm wide and are commonly low Y domains (Fig. S2). Thirty-two analyses across 10 monazite grains define a spread in 232Th-208Pb dates from 107.4 ± 2.6 Ma to 72.3 ± 1.9 Ma that comprise two main populations – an older population between ca. 100 and 90 Ma and a younger population between ca. 80 and 70 Ma (Fig. 5b). HREE slopes in chondrite normalized spider plots of the monazite data define a general trend of increasing slope (Gd/Yb) with younger date (Fig. 5d). This trend is mirrored by normalized Eu concentrations, which are lowest for the oldest dates and broadly increase with younger dates (Fig. 5d).
4.c.2. Apatite U-Pb
Nineteen apatite grains located in specimen Y5 were analysed for U–Pb geochronology (Fig. S3); no suitable grains were identified in specimen Y3DD. Apatite grains in Y5 are generally equant and range in size from ∼50 to ∼200 μm across, with the majority falling on the smaller size of that spectrum. No zoning was evident in back-scattered electron imaging (Fig. S3). Thirty-seven spot analyses across the apatite grains outline a range of analyses that form a single robust regression (Powell et al. Reference Powell, Green, Marillo Sialer and Woodhead2020) (Fig. 6a) with a lower intercept of 38.3 ± 4.5 Ma (spine [s] = 0.95) in Tera-Wasserburg space.
4.c.3. 87Rb/87Sr
Specimen Y5 was examined for Rb–Sr geochronology to further assess the thermal history of the specimen. Analyses of brown mica, white mica and plagioclase define a wedge-shaped array of data in a 87Sr/86Sr versus 87Rb/86Sr plot that opens away from a single initial 87Sr/86Sr composition (Fig. 6b). The limited spread in the 87Sr/86Sr data and the uncertainties in the ratios do not permit separation of plagioclase and white mica into multiple populations. The biotite analyses, however, can be grouped to define the sides of the wedge and thereby the minimum and maximum isochrons permissible in the dataset. The older isochron includes all white mica, plagioclase and a subset of brown mica to define a date of 62.5 ± 0.8 Ma (s = 0.45, n = 23/44), whereas the same white mica and plagioclase analyse, but a different subset of brown mica define a younger isochron at 40.1 ± 1.4 Ma (s = 0.39, n = 10/44).
4.c.4. Plutonic zircon and monazite U(-Th)-Pb
Zircon grains separated from specimens Y7, Y9 and Y10 were dated to provide information about the timing of pluton emplacement on both sides of the Shyok suture between rocks of Karakoram (Y7) and Kohistan (Y9, Y10) affinity. Forty spots across the same number of grains (Fig. S4) separated from Y7 define a single age population with a 207Pb corrected (Stacey & Kramers, Reference Stacey and Kramers1975) 206Pb/238U weighted mean date of 94.9 ± 0.3 Ma (MSWD = 1.5, n = 40) (Fig. 7). Similarly, 36 spot zircon analyses in Y9 (1 per grain) and 40 spots in 36 zircon from Y10 (Fig. S4) also define single age populations (Fig. 7). The 207Pb corrected (Stacey & Kramers, Reference Stacey and Kramers1975) 206Pb/238U weighted mean zircon date for Y9 is 60.8 ± 0.2 Ma (MSWD = 1.7, n = 32/36), while that from Y10 is 60.2 ± 0.2 Ma (MSWD = 1.0, n = 39/40).
Zircon trace element concentrations are similar across the three specimens analysed. REE spider plots of data from Y7, Y9 and Y10 show relative depletion in light REE (LREE), with some LREE elements below detection (see supplementary materials), and enrichment in HREE (Fig. 7).
5. Interpretations
The rocks exposed in the Yasin-Ishkuman region record a protracted history of plutonism, metamorphism and post-kinematic metasomatism. The calcic bulk composition and relict igneous microstructures in Y5 and Y3DD attest to both specimens having been derived from silicic plutonic protoliths. Whereas both Y5 and Y3DD preserve a peak metamorphic mineral assemblage with garnet–sillimanite–biotite–plagioclase–quartz–ilmenite (+melt), Y5 also preserves a record of what is likely the subsequent growth of cordierite during decompression from peak-temperature conditions within the stability field of garnet. The replacement of cordierite by white mica (Dunkley et al. Reference Dunkley, Clarke and Harley1999) in Y5 and the radial growth of muscovite and growth of ilmenite surrounding lathes of biotite in Y3DD are all consistent with post-kinematic metasomatism (Dharmapriya et al. Reference Dharmapriya, Malaviarachchi, Kriegsman, Galli, Dyck, Sajeev, Su and Pitawala2020; Bidgood et al. Reference Bidgood, Waters, Dyck and Roberts2023) and may have resulted from an influx of hydrous fluids during a subsequent tectonothermal event.
5.a. Metamorphic conditions
Figure 8a presents the isochemical phase diagram (pseudosection) calculated for the thin section of specimen Y5. The observed mineral assemblage of garnet–biotite–plagioclase–quartz–ilmenite (+melt) is stable over a broad range of upper-amphibolite facies conditions. However, the overlap of pyrope, grossular and spessartine isopleths refines our estimate of the peak-temperature equilibrium conditions to ∼750 ± 30 °C and 0.66 ± 0.05 GPa. Sillimanite, although observed as intergrowths with biotite (Fig. 8c), is notably absent at the interpreted peak-temperature conditions. Although it is possible that prograde (sub-solidus) sillimanite persisted metastably, as indicated by the dashed prograde arrow in Fig. 8a, we favour the interpretation that the sillimanite present in the specimen was a retrograde phase, stabilized upon exhumation and attendant ductile deformation as the rock’s metamorphic conditions evolved through the garnet–biotite–sillimanite–cordierite–plagioclase–quartz–magnetite stability field (Fig. 8a). Our interpretation is supported, in part, by the overlapping Ti-in-biotite temperatures of 685 ± 24 °C and an avPT results of 709 ± 82 °C, 0.51 ± 0.08 GPa when sillimanite and a stoichiometric cordierite (with acrd = 0.43 ± 0.022 and afcrd = 0.15 ± 0.017) are considered in equilibrium. A portion of the retrograde history of Y5 is recorded by the coexistence of garnet, cordierite and sillimanite, consistent with decompression to ∼0.5 GPa ± 0.1 GPa at ∼675 ± 30 °C. As shown in Fig. 8b, c, modal abundances of both garnet and plagioclase are predicted to increase during prograde metamorphism and decrease along the predicted retrograde path.
As illustrated in the pseudosection shown in Fig. 8d, specimen Y3DD records a similar metamorphic history to Y5, with peak temperatures of ∼790 ± 30 °C based on the coexistence of garnet–K-Feldspar–sillimanite–biotite–plagioclase–quartz. Given the low modal abundance of garnet and its highly fractured and corroded appearance, the pressures of peak-temperature metamorphism were not determined by the position of overlapping isopleths. Instead, we favour the avPT result of 751 ± 42 °C, 0.65 ± 0.13 GPa for our estimate of peak-temperature conditions. The Ti-in-biotite temperature of 683 ± 24 °C likely records the final condition of matrix biotite equilibration as the rock cooled towards the solidus (Dyck et al. Reference Dyck, Goddard, Wallis, Hansen and Martel2021). The post-kinematic growth of muscovite could have occurred over a broad temperature range from <500 to 700 °C and need not be related to the peak-metamorphic event recorded in these samples (Fig. 8d). In contrast to Y5, the modal abundance of plagioclase in Y3DD would have decreased during prograde metamorphism once the temperature was in excess of ∼700 °C (Fig. 8f).
5.b. Monazite geochronology
Monazite from the metamorphic specimens analysed record two main growth events; one that peaked between ca. 105 and 95 Ma and a second that peaked ca. 75 Ma (Fig. 5e, f). The older event in both specimen Y5 and specimen Y3DD is characterized by higher Y concentrations, lower Gd/Yb (Fig. 5c, d) and sector zoning in monazite (Figs. S1 and S2). Sector zoning in monazite is typically associated with crystals that have grown from a melt (Stepanov et al. Reference Stepanov, Hermann, Rubatto and Rapp2012; Catlos, Reference Catlos2013), and as such, the monazite cores are interpreted to reflect the timing of emplacement of the protolith plutonic rocks. The younger population of monazite is spatially associated with patchy or unzoned grain mantles and rims (Figs. S1 and S2). Gd/Yb and Y concentrations generally increase and decrease, respectively, relative to the older population. Assuming that garnet is the main phase controlling HREE availability in these rocks (Foster et al. Reference Foster, Kinny, Vance, Prince and Harris2000; Pyle et al. Reference Pyle, Spear, Rudnick and McDonough2001; Foster et al. Reference Foster, Parrish, Horstwood, Chenery, Pyle and Gibson2004; e.g. Buick et al. Reference Buick, Hermann, Williams, Gibson and Rubatto2006; Larson et al. Reference Larson, Ali, Shrestha, Soret, Cottle and Ahmad2019), decreased availability of Y and HREE for monazite in the younger population would indicate garnet growth/stability at that time. Such an interpretation is consistent with the results of phase equilibria modelling which outline a peak, garnet-stable assemblage, with minimal melt or free water both of which can significantly impact the monazite record (Kohn et al. Reference Kohn, Wieland, Parkinson and Upreti2005; Shrestha et al. Reference Shrestha, Larson, Duesterhoeft, Soret and Cottle2019; Larson et al. Reference Larson, Shrestha, Cottle, Guilmette, Johnson, Gibson and Gervais2022). Moreover, the behaviour of Eu, decreasing and increasing towards the younger populations in Y3DD and Y5, respectively (Fig. 5c, d), is also consistent with phase equilibria modelling prediction of plagioclase stability (see Philpotts & Schnetzler, Reference Philpotts and Schnetzler1968) which increases along the prograde path in Y3DD and decreases in Y5. The ca. 75 Ma monazite population is therefore interpreted to reflect peak metamorphism in the two specimens analysed.
5.c. Rb–Sr and apatite U–Pb geochronology
The wedge-shaped spread in in situ Rb–Sr analyses from specimen Y5 outlines is interpreted to reflect two distinct events. The older, 62.5 ± 0.8 Ma isochron likely reflects post-peak metamorphism cooling through the closure of Sr mobility or Early Paleocene thermal perturbation, perhaps related to metamorphism in the Hunza portion of the Karakoram region at this time (Fraser et al. Reference Fraser, Searle, Parrish and Noble2001; Foster et al. Reference Foster, Parrish, Horstwood, Chenery, Pyle and Gibson2004). The younger, 41.1 ± 1.4 Ma isochron overlaps with the 38.3 ± 4.5 Ma apatite date from the same rock. A minor, late fluid and/or thermal modification of Y5 may be evidenced by the local chlorite replacement of mica and late, cross-cutting chlorite veins (Fig. 3b). Both apatite U–Pb (Ribeiro et al. Reference Ribeiro, Lagoeiro, Faleiros, Hunter, Queiroga, Raveggi, Cawood, Finch and Campanha2020) and mica Rb–Sr (Larson et al. 2023) are sensitive to fluid modification and as such it is interpreted that the two geochronological systems may record the same event.
5.d. Plutonic rocks
The zircon from plutonic rocks examined in this study has chemistries that plot across the continental arc-type field in U/Yb vs. Nb/Yb space (Fig. 9; Grimes et al. Reference Grimes, Wooden, Cheadle and John2015). An arc affinity is consistent with Y7 (94.9 ± 0.3 Ma) having been sampled from the eastern extent of the Ghamu Bar pluton (Fig. 1b), previously interpreted as part of the broader Karakoram axial batholith generated during mid-Cretaceous subduction beneath the southern margin of Asia (Debon et al. Reference Debon, Le Fort, Dautel, Sonet and Zimmermann1987). The Ghamu Bar pluton is part of a linear series of composite continental arc plutons that extend to the southwest away from the study area. To the south-east, these include the ca. 104 Ma Phargam granite (Heuberger et al. Reference Heuberger, Schaltegger, Burg, Villa, Frank, Dawood, Hussain and Zanchi2007) and ca. 110–102 Ma Buni Zom pluton (Faisal et al. Reference Faisal, Larson, King and Cottle2016), while to the west and north, rocks in the Hunza pluton been dated via whole rock Rb–Sr as 97 ± 17 (Debon et al. Reference Debon, Le Fort, Dautel, Sonet and Zimmermann1987), and zircon U–Pb as 95 +4/-6 Ma (lower intercept; Lefort et al. Reference Lefort, Michard, Sonet, Zimmermann and Shams1983) and 105.7 ± 0.5 Ma (concordant weighted mean; Fraser et al. Reference Fraser, Searle, Parrish and Noble2001).
Specimens Y9 and Y10 were collected from south of the suture (Fig. 1b). Previous whole rock Rb–Sr geochronology of specimens from the Gindai pluton (Y9) yielded a date of 59 ± 2 Ma (Debon et al. Reference Debon, Le Fort, Dautel, Sonet and Zimmermann1987), which overlaps with the zircon U–Pb date of 60.9 ± 0.2 Ma reported herein. The weakly deformed Paleocene plutonic rocks in the Kohistan terrane have been interpreted to reflect subduction under the accreted arc prior to continental collision (Jan et al. Reference Jan, Asif, Tahirkheli and Kamal1981; Debon et al. Reference Debon, Le Fort, Dautel, Sonet and Zimmermann1987), consistent with the zircon chemistry reported herein.
6. Discussion
Initial mapping of the Hindu Raj area suggested that the plutonic rocks therein may be contiguous with the Karakoram batholith to the east in the Hunza region (Jan et al. Reference Jan, Asif, Tahirkheli and Kamal1981; Ebblin, Reference Ebblin1988). The Ghamu Bar pluton is not directly connected to the main Hindu Raj – Hunza Karakoram batholith but consists of similar pre-collision granodiorites (Fig. 1b; Gaetani et al. Reference Gaetani, Angiolini, Nicora, Sciunnach, Le Fort, Tanoli and Khan1996). The new geochronological data presented herein, from both meta-plutonic and plutonic rocks overlap in age with those reported from farther east (Searle et al. Reference Searle, Parrish, Tirrul and Rex1990 and references therein; Crawford & Searle, Reference Crawford and Searle1992) including the interpreted ca. 106 Ma crystallization of the Hunza plutonic unit (Fraser et al. Reference Fraser, Searle, Parrish and Noble2001) in the adjacent Hunza region (Fig. 1a). Moreover, zircon trace element signatures are consistent with the plutonic rocks developing as part of a continental arc, again matching that expected for the Karakoram batholith.
The Hindu Raj area records Late Cretaceous age amphibolite facies metamorphism. The timing of peak metamorphism (ca. 80–75 Ma) overlaps with records from across the Hindu Kush to the west (Faisal et al. Reference Faisal, Larson, Cottle and Lamming2014; Soret et al. Reference Soret, Larson, Cottle, Smit, Johnson, Shrestha, Ali and Faisal2019) and sparce evidence from the Hunza portion of the Karakoram to the east (Fraser et al. Reference Fraser, Searle, Parrish and Noble2001; Foster et al. Reference Foster, Parrish, Horstwood, Chenery, Pyle and Gibson2004). Our peak P-T condition estimates of ∼750 ± 30 °C and 0.65 ± 0.05 GPa are higher temperature than those calculated for the same time period in the Hindu Kush (500–600°C and 0.6 GPa; Soret et al. Reference Soret, Larson, Cottle, Smit, Johnson, Shrestha, Ali and Faisal2019) and the Hunza Karakoram (553 ± 25 °C and <0.6 GPa; Foster et al. Reference Foster, Parrish, Horstwood, Chenery, Pyle and Gibson2004).
Previous work in the broader region is divided regarding the potential significance of metamorphism and deformation in Late Cretaceous time. Some researchers suggest that the Late Cretaceous rock record in the south Asian margin reflects the collision of the Kohistan island arc (Petterson & Windley, Reference Petterson and Windley1985; Petterson et al. Reference Petterson, Windley and Sullivan1991; Weinberg et al. Reference Weinberg, Dunlap and Whitehouse2000; Fraser et al. Reference Fraser, Searle, Parrish and Noble2001; Rehman et al. Reference Rehman, Seno, Yamamoto and Khan2011; Faisal et al. Reference Faisal, Larson, Cottle and Lamming2014), while others have suggested that docking of Kohistan occurred as recently as 50 Ma (Khan et al. Reference Khan, Walker, Hall, Burke, Shah and Stockli2009) and that Late Cretaceous deformation and metamorphism may actually be linked to widespread, long-lasting plutonism (Burg, Reference Burg, Brown and Ryan2011). The plutonic rock dated (Y7) from north of the Shyok suture in the Hindu Raj (Fig. 1b), returned an age of 94.9 ± 0.3 Ma, however, which is significantly older than the timing of peak metamorphism ca. 75 Ma. The lack of widespread and long-lasting Late Cretaceous plutonism in both the current study area and the adjacent Hindu Kush region farther west, which both record metamorphic monazite growth at that time (see Faisal et al. Reference Faisal, Larson, Cottle and Lamming2014; Soret et al. Reference Soret, Larson, Cottle, Smit, Johnson, Shrestha, Ali and Faisal2019), is inconsistent with a non-collisional origin. Instead, we conclude that 80–70 Ma monazite growth in the Hindu Raj, and coeval records in adjacent regions, reflects collision of the Kohistan Arc and closure of the Shyok suture.
The record of Late Cretaceous high-temperature metamorphism in the study area appears to have ended by ca. 70 Ma, before the older of the Rb–Sr isochrons that bracket the in situ analyses in Y5 at 62.54 ± 0.79 Ma. That date overlaps an 40Ar/39Ar biotite cooling date of 61.6 ± 1.1 Ma (Faisal et al. Reference Faisal, Larson, Camacho and Coutand2018) from the Buni Zom pluton (110–104 Ma – zircon U-Pb; Faisal et al. Reference Faisal, Larson, King and Cottle2016) in the Hindu Kush region farther west. The Rb–Sr date also overlaps reported metamorphism in the Hunza portion of the Karakoram region to the east (ca. 63 Ma, Fraser et al. Reference Fraser, Searle, Parrish and Noble2001; Foster et al. Reference Foster, Parrish, Horstwood, Chenery, Pyle and Gibson2004) indicating a decoupling from the thermal history of the Hindu Raj at that time. The young Rb–Sr isochron that is interpreted to record a fluid or thermal event at 41.1 ± 1.4 Ma is coincident with evidence of widespread continental collision from the southern side of the Kohistan arc at ca. 40 Ma (see summary in Soret et al. Reference Soret, Larson, Cottle and Ali2021).
7. Conclusions
New geochronological and metamorphic data from the Hindu Raj region demonstrate affinity to rocks in the adjacent Hindu Kush and Karakoram regions. The metamorphic record in the Hindu Raj is dominated by the north-directed subduction beneath the Asian continental margin and Late Cretaceous/Paleocene collision of the Kohistan arc with the south Asian margin. A subsequent Paleocene thermal event in the Hindu Raj, however, is coeval with metamorphism in the Karakoram that is not recorded in the Hindu Kush. The geological similarities the Hindu Raj shares with the Karakoram and Hindu Kush areas may not be surprising given its spatial position. The new information presented herein, though, is foundational to linking the geological histories across the south Asian margin prior to continental collision and forming a complete picture of what the antecedent structure of the margin was prior to the arrival of the Indian plate.
Supplementary material
The supplementary material for this article can be found at https://doi.org/10.1017/S0016756823000419
Acknowledgements
This work is supported by Discovery Grants from the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada to K. Larson and B. Dyck. M. Button and S. Shrestha from the Fipke Laboratory for Trace Element Research at UBC Okanagan are thanked for their analytical expertise and insight. Logistical support and transportation were provided by the National Centre of Excellence in Geology, University of Peshawar, KP, Pakistan. Data related to this work are openly available through the Open Science Framework: https://osf.io/yd9wn/. Reviews by Y. Rolland and an anonymous reviewer and editorial handling by S. Cox helped improve the manuscript.