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1. Petrogenesis and Tectonic Implications of the Oligocene Dalongtan Shoshonitic Syenite Porphyry in Central Yunnan, Southeastern Tibetan Plateau: Constraints from Geochronology, Geochemistry and Sr-Nd-Hf Isotopes.

2. Rifting of the Indian passive continental margin: Insights from the Langjiexue basalts in the central Tethyan Himalaya, southern Tibet.

3. A Residual Middle Triassic Oceanic Island-Seamount in the Maoershan Area, Northwest Tibet: Implications for the Evolution of the Paleo-Tethys Ocean.

4. Early Jurassic intra-oceanic subduction initiation along the Bangong Meso-Tethys: Geochemical and geochronological evidence from the Shiquanhe ophiolitic complex, western Tibet.

5. Origin and tectonic setting of Cretaceous ophiolites in the Gaoligong tectonic belt, SW China: Implications for the tectonic evolution of the Bangonghu–Nujiang Meso–Tethys.

6. Generation of ultraslow-spreading oceanic crust traced by various mafic blocks from ophiolitic mélange in the Xigaze Ophiolites, southern Tibet.

7. Interaction of upwelling asthenosphere with oceanic lithospheric mantle in Bangong-Nujiang subduction zone: A new mechanism for the petrogenesis of Nb-enriched basalts.

8. Sequential melting of deep crustal source rocks in a rift system: An example from southern Tibet.

9. High- and low-Mg adakitic rocks in southern Tibet: Implication for the crustal thickening and geodynamic process in the late Cretaceous.

10. Early Cretaceous Granitoids Magmatism in the Nagqu Area, Northern Tibet: Constraints on the Timing of the Lhasa–Qiangtang Collision.

11. Early Cretaceous hydrous mafic magmatism in the eastern Lhasa terrane, Tibet: Petrogenesis and constraints on the early history of the eastern Jiali (Parlung) fault.

12. Compositional signatures of ophiolitic rocks from the Dongco massif: Novel insights into the evolution of the central Tibetan Meso-Tethyan oceanic plateau.

13. Temporal and Spatial Variations of Enriched Source Components in Linzizong Volcanic Succession, Tibet, and Implications for the India–Asia Collision.

14. Genesis and mineralization potential of the Late Cretaceous Chemen granodioritic intrusion in the southern Gangdese magmatic belt, Tibet.