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Discovery of an Entrapped Early Permian

                          (ca. 299 Ma) Peri-Gondwanic Sliver in the

                          Cretaceous Shyok Suture of Northern

                          Ladakh, India: Diverse Implications



         Rajeev Upadhyay, Dept. of Geology (CAS), Kumaun University, Nainital-263001 (Uttarakhand), India, rajeevntl1@gmail.com; Saurabh
         Gautam, Birbal Sahni Institute of Palaeosciences, 53 University Road, Lucknow-226007, India; and Ram Awatar, 7/464 A, Vikas Nagar,
         Lucknow-226022, India


         ABSTRACT                            spreading, which produced new oceanic   et al., 1990; Scotese and McKerrow, 1990;
          In a significant breakthrough, we report   crust and several smaller oceans and larger   Scotese and Langford, 1995; Upadhyay et
         the first discovery of twenty-six genera   plates. The erstwhile Tethys Ocean, juxta-  al., 1999b; Muttoni et al., 2009). These
         and thirty-five species of Early Permian   posed between the Eurasian continent in the   blocks belong to a poorly defined continent
         (Asselian–Sakmarian and Artinskian; 299   north and Gondwana in the south, ruptured,   named peri-Gondwana or Cimmeria (Şengör,
         Ma to 276 Ma) Gondwanic palynomorphs   and culminated into the subsequent open-  1987). Based on the occurrence of Early
         from a tectonically emplaced metasedimen-  ing and closing of nascent Neo-Tethys and   Permian marine Gondwanan sediments,
         tary sliver of Shyok Ophiolitic Mélange of   Paleo-Tethys oceans, respectively. Several   the Karakoram terrane is now (Fig. 1) iden-
         the India-Asia Collision zone of Northern   smaller continental fragments existed   tified as a peri-Gondwanan microcontinent
         Ladakh, India. These  palynofloral  assem-  between the two continental masses (Smith   at a latitude ~35 S, somewhere between the
         blages are of peri-Gondwanian (Cimmerian)   et al., 1981; Nie et al., 1990; Scotese and   Indian plate and the Qiangtang-Lhasa blocks
         origin and have a strong affinity with the   Langford, 1995; Upadhyay et al., 1999b).  (Upadhyay et al., 1999b). Paleogeographic
         Gondwana assemblage of peninsular India.   Paleogeographic  reconstructions  of   reconstruction of the Early Permian shows
         Similar palynofloral  assemblages are  also   Pangaea during the late Paleozoic (Smith et   that these peri-Gondwanian microconti-
         known from Extra-Peninsular India, Salt   al., 1981; Nie et al., 1990; Scotese and   nents were situated between ~20° and 40°
         Range, Karakoram, Antarctica,  Australia,   Langford, 1995) show that a southern belt of   southern latitudes (Nie et al., 1990; Scotese
         South Africa, and South America. The   these continental fragments stretching from   and Langford, 1995; Muttoni et al., 2009).
         occurrence of Gondwanic sliver within the   Iran and Afghanistan, through Tibet to   Thus, the origin and evolution of the
         Shyok Suture is interpreted as a thin flake   western Thailand, Malaysia, and Sumatra   Ladakh-Kohistan block and Karakoram ter-
         of active continental margin of peri-  has been accreted to Asia since the mid-  rane of northwest India and  Lhasa and
         Gondwanic microcontinent/Kshiroda plate,   Paleozoic  (Şengör,  1987;  Metcalfe,  2006).   Qiangtang blocks of western Tibet have now
         which was sliced off during the subduction/  The Karakoram-Hindukush microplate in   been widely accepted to have resulted
         collision process, between Ladakh block   the west and the Qiangtang-Lhasa block in   from multiple subduction/collisional events
         and Karakoram–Qiangtang-Lhasa terrane   central and southeastern Asia are among   between Gondwana-derived terranes or con-
         and amalgamated with obducted remnants   these blocks, which were welded/sutured to   tinents and Eurasia since the late Paleozoic
         of the accretionary prism of the nascent   Asia, probably around 130–120 Ma (Şengör,   (Gansser, 1977; Allégre et al., 1984; Şengör,
         Shyok Suture. The Shyok Suture closed   1987; Dewey et al., 1988, and references   1987;  Dewey  et  al.,  1988;  Scotese  and
         during the mid- to Late Cretaceous period.   therein) (Fig. 1). The origin, migration path,   McKerrow, 1990; Nie et al., 1990; Beck et al.,
         Subsequent syn- and post-collision syn-  timing of accretion, and assembly of all of   1995; Burg et al., 1996; Upadhyay et al.,
         kinematic episodes tectonically juxtaposed   these blocks in their present tectonic posi-  1999b; Metcalfe, 2006; Muttoni et al., 2009;
         the peri-Gondwanic sliver in the tectonized   tion are little known. The paleogeography   Bouilhol et al., 2013; Upadhyay, 2002, 2014;
         zone of Shyok Ophiolitic Mélange. The   during the break-up of Gondwana is poorly   Borneman et al., 2015).
         India-Asia  collision, which took place  ca.   constrained, and scant geological informa-  In northwest India, the Ladakh block lies
         60–50 Ma with the demise of Neo-Tethys   tion is available from Pamir, Northern   between the Indian Plate in the south and
         Ocean, along the Indus Tsangpo Suture   Ladakh, Karakoram, and western Tibet.   the Eurasian Plate in the north. To the west,
         Zone, modified the geometry of accreted   However, based on temperate fauna, flora,   this block is separated from  the  Kohistan
         ophiolitic stack of the Shyok Suture.  and even glacial and glaciomarine deposits   Complex by the Nanga Parbat–Haramosh
                                             (tillites or diamictites) from the Permian   syntaxis, and to the east, it is separated
         INTRODUCTION                        sequences, the Central Iran, Helmand,   from the Lhasa and Quiangtang blocks by
          The supercontinent Pangaea began to   Western  Qiangtang,  Lhasa,  and  Sibumasu   the Karakoram fault (Upadhyay, 2002,
         break apart during the late Carboniferous–  blocks are interpreted as having rifted off   2014) (Figs. 1 and 2). The Ladakh block is
         early Permian period (ca. 300 Ma–272 Ma).   the northern margin of Gondwana in post-  bounded by two suture  zones—the  Indus
         This break-up is followed by the seafloor   Early Permian times (Smith et al., 1981; Nie   Suture in the south and the Shyok Suture in

         GSA Today, v. 32, https://doi.org/10.1130/GSATG481A.1. CC-BY-NC.

         4  GSA TODAY  |  January 2022
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