Mantle-Crust Interaction in Petrogenesis of the Gabbro-Granite Association in the Preobrazhenka Intrusion, Eastern Kazakhstan

S. V. Khromykha, b, *, A. A. Tsygankovc, d, G. N. Burmakinac, P. D. Kotlera, b, and E. N. Sokolovaa
Translated by M. Bogina

aSobolev Institute of Geology and Mineralogy, Siberian Branch of Russian Academy of Sciences, Novosibirsk, 630090 Russia

bNovosibirsk State University, Novosibirsk, 630090 Russia

cGeological Institute, Siberian Branch of the Russian Academy of Sciences, Ulan-Ude, 670047 Russia

dBuryat State University, Ulan-Ude, 670000 Russia

Correspondence to: *Е-mail: serkhrom@mail.ru

Received 14 June, 2017

Abstract—The paper reports results of petrological-geochemical, isotope, and geochronological studies of the Preobrazhenka gabbro–granitoid massif located in the Altai collisional system of Hercynides, Eastern Kazakhstan. The massif shows evidence for the interaction of compositionally contrasting magmas during its emplacement. Mineralogical–petrological and geochemical studies indicate that the gabbroid rocks of the massif were formed through differentiation of primary trachybasaltic magma and its interaction with crustal anatectic melts. Origin of the granitoid rocks is related to melting of crustal protoliths under the thermal effect of mafic melts. The mantle–crust interaction occurred in several stages and at different depths. A model proposed here to explain the intrusion formation suggests subsequent emplacement of basite magmas in lithosphere and their cooling, melting of crustal protolith, emplacement at the upper crustal levels and cooling of the granitoid and basite magmas. It was concluded that the formation of gabbro-granitoid intrusive massifs serves as an indicator of active mantle–crust interaction at the late evolutionary stages of accretionary–collisional belts, when strike-slip pull-apart deformations causes the high permeability of lithosphere.

Keywords: gabbro-granitoid intrusions, mantle-crust interaction, Late Paleozoic, Central Asia, Eastern Kazakhstan, Tarim mantle plume

DOI: 10.1134/S0869591118040045