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Turbidites from the Shiquanhe-Namco Ophiolite Mélange Zone (SNMZ) record critical information about the tec-tonic affinity of the SNMZ and the evolutionary history of the Meso-Tethys Ocean in Tibet.This paper reports sed-imentologic,sandstone petrographic,zircon U-Pb geochronologic,and clastic rocks geochemical data of newly identified turbidites (Asa Formation) in the Asa Ophiolite Mélange.The youngest ages of detrital zircon from the turbiditic sandstone samples,together with ~115 Ma U-Pb concordant age from the tuff intercalation within the Asa Formation indicate an Early Cretaceous age.The sandstone mineral modal composition data show that the main component is quartz grains and the minor components are sedimentary and volcanic fragments,sug-gesting that the turbidites were mainly derived from a recycled orogen provenance with a minor addition of vol-canic arc materials.The detrital U-Pb zircon ages of turbiditic sandstones yield main age populations of 170-120 Ma,300-220 Ma,600-500 Ma,1000-700 Ma,1900-1500 Ma,and ~2500 Ma,similar to the ages of the Qiangtang Terrane(age peak of 600-500 Ma,1000-900 Ma,~1850 Ma and ~2500 Ma) and the accretionary complex in the Bangong-Nujiang Ophiolite Zone (BNMZ) rather than the age of the Central Lhasa Terrane (age peak of~300 Ma,~550 Ma and ~1150 Ma).The mineral modal compositions,detrital U-Pb zircon ages,and geo-chemical data of clastic rocks suggest that the Asa Formation is composed of sediments primarily recycled from the Jurassic accretionary complex within the BNMZ with the secondary addition of intermediate-felsic island arc materials from the South Qiangtang Terrane.Based on our new results and previous studies,we infer that the SNMZ represents a part of the Meso-Tethys Suture Zone,rather than a southward tectonic klippe of the BNMZ or an isolated ophiolitic mélange zone within the Lhasa Terrane.The Meso-Tethys Suture Zone records the con-tinuous evolutionary history of the northward subduction,accretion,arc-Lhasa collision,and Lhasa-Qiangtang collision of the Meso-Tethys Ocean from the Early Jurassic to the Early Cretaceous.