Age of crustal melting, emplacement and exhumation history of the Shivling leucogranite, Garhwal Himalaya

Searle MP, Noble SR, Hurford AJ, Rex DC

We report a U-Pb monazite age of 23.0 ± 0.2 Ma for the Shivling leucogranite, a tourmaline + muscovite ± biotite leucogranite at the top of the High Himalayan slab in the Garhwal Himalaya, north India. The Shivling-Bhagirathi leucogranite is a viscous near-minimum melt, emplaced as a foliation parallel laccolith via a dyke network not far from its source region. Prograde heating occurred soon after the India-Asia collision at c. 50 Ma up to melting at 23 Ma and high temperatures (>550 °C) were maintained for at least 15 Ma after garnet growth. The leucogranite was emplaced at mid-crustal depths along the footwall of the Jhala fault, a large-scale low-angle normal fault, part of the South Tibetan Detachment system, above kyanite and sillimanite grade gneisses. The geometry of the leucogranite laccolith shows biaxial extension and boudinage both perpendicular (north-northeast-south-southwest) and parallel to the strike (west-northwest-east-southeast) of the mountain range. Unroofing occurred by underthrusting beneath the High Himalayan slab along the Main Central Thrust zone, progressively 'jacking up' the leucogranites, removal of material above by low-angle normal faulting, and erosion. Very rapid cooling at rates of 200-350 °C/Ma between 23-21 Ma immediately followed crystallization, as tectonic unroofing and erosion removed 24-28 km of overburden during this time. K-Ar muscovite ages are 22 ± 1.0 Ma and fission track ages of zircons from >5000 m on the North Ridge of Shivling are 14.2 ± 2.1 and 8.8 ± 1.2 Ma and apatites are 3.5 ± 0.79 and 2.61 ± 0.23 Ma. Slow steady state cooling at rates of 20-30 °C/Ma from 20-1 Ma shows that maximum erosion rates and unroofing of the leucogranite occurred during the early Miocene. This timing coincides with initiation of low-angle, north-dipping normal faulting along the South Tibetan Detachment system.