2 research outputs found

    Mineralogy, Geochemistry, and Geochronology of the Yehe-Shigna Ophiolitic Massif, Tuva-Mongolian Microcontinent, Southern Siberia: Evidence for a Back-Arc Origin and Geodynamic Implications

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    The new results have been represented of mineralogical–geochemical and geochronological studies of rocks of the Yehe-Shigna ophiolite massif located in the Tuva-Mongolian microcontinent in the northern part of the Central Asian orogenic belt (Eastern Sayan, Southern Siberia). The Yehe-Shigna ophiolite massif is part of the Belsk-Dugda ophiolite belt. The structural position, age, and geochemical characteristics of the belt indicate its formation in the setting of the back-arc basin of the Shishkhid intraoceanic island arc, developing in the period of 810–750 million years. It is assumed that together with the same-age formations of the Oka accretion wedge and the Sarkhoi active margin, it formed on the convergent margin of the Gondwana supercontinent. Its basement is represented by the Archean-Early Precambrian crystalline rocks and carbonate cover (“Gargan Glyba”). The gold-bearing Neoproterozoic deposits with dominant gold-telluride assemblages are localization in large ophiolites thrust zones along with the frame of the “Gargan Glyba”. They are allochthonous with respect to the Late Neoproterozoic-Cambrian Tuva-Mongolian island arc of the Siberian continent. A similar type of gold deposit is probably worth looking for ophiolites thrust zones in other Precambrian Gondwana-derived microcontinents
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