scholarly journals A revised interpretation of the Chon Aike magmatic province: Active margin origin and implications for the opening of the Weddell Sea

Lithos ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 386-387 ◽  
pp. 106013
Author(s):  
Joaquin Bastias ◽  
Richard Spikings ◽  
Teal Riley ◽  
Alexey Ulianov ◽  
Anne Grunow ◽  
...  
Keyword(s):  
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joaquin Bastias ◽  
Richard Spikings ◽  
Alexey Ulianov ◽  
Teal Riley ◽  
Anne Grunow ◽  
...  

<p>We present new geochemical, isotopic and geochronological analyses of Late Triassic-Jurassic volcanic and intrusive rocks of the Antarctic Peninsula and Patagonia. Whole-rock geochemical data suggest that all of these igneous units formed in an active margin setting. This conclusion challenges the current paradigm that Jurassic magmatism of the Chon Aike province formed by the migration of the Karoo mantle plume from Africa towards the Pacific margin (Pankhurst et al., 2000). KDE analysis of 98 crystallisation ages reveals four main pulses of magmatism (V0: ~223-200 Ma; V1: ~188-178 Ma; V2: ~173-160 Ma; V3: ~157-145 Ma), which are approximately coincident with the episodic nature of the Chon Aike Magmatic Province reported by Pankhurst et al. (2000). Some magmatic units in eastern Patagonia are distal to the hypothetical paleo-trench relative to most active margin magmatism. These rocks have geochemical and geochronological characteristics that are indistinguishable from active margin-related rocks located ~200km from the palaeo-trench. Thus, we propose that a segment of the slab formed a flat-slab along southwestern Gondwana during the Late Triassic-Jurassic. This flat-slab is probably a temporal extension of the flat-slab episode suggested by Navarrete et al. (2019) for the Late Triassic (V0 episode) in eastern Patagonia. The progressive migration of the flat-slab magmatism to the southwestern margin of Patagonia suggest an evolution of its architecture during the Jurassic. Further, we propose that the flat-slab magmatism present in eastern Patagonia was triggered by slab failure, where foundering of the slab drove upwelling of hot mantle, forming a broad arc in an inland position in eastern Patagonia. Flat-slab subduction finished during the V3 episode (~157-145 Ma), with a continuation of an active margin along the western margin of the Antarctic Peninsula and Patagonia. Coeval extension in the South Atlantic and in western Patagonia lead to sea floor spreading, the formation of the Weddell Sea (~155-147 Ma; e.g. Konig & Jokat. 2006) and the Rocas Verdes Basin (~150 Ma; e.g. Calderon et al., 2007), respectively. The paleogeographic reconstructions juxtapose the northern Antarctic Peninsula and southern Patagonia during the Late Jurassic (e.g. Jokat et al., 2003), which suggest that the Rocas Verdes Basin and the Weddell Sea are oriented by a ~120° angle and potentially meet in southern Patagonia. This junction of sea-floor spreadings corresponds to the limits of the southern Rocas Verdes Basin with the eastern Weddell Sea oceanic lithosphere. We suggest that these rifts formed part of a triple junction, while the third rift arm should be located with a sub north-south orientation in the Antarctic Peninsula. Vast regions of the Antarctic Peninsula remain unexplored beneath the ice-cap, although we speculate that the third arm may correspond to the Eastern Palmer Land Shear Zone, which currently has a lateral extension of ~1500km (Vaughan & Storey, 2000). This new triple junction would be a Ridge-Ridge-Transform Fault intersection.</p><p>Calderon et al. 2007. JGS,164: 1011-1022.</p><p>Jokat et al. 2003. JGR, 108: 2428.</p><p>Konig & Jokat. 2006, 111: B12102.</p><p>Pankhurst et al. 2000. JP, 41(5): 605-625.</p><p>Navarrete et al. 2019. ESR, 194: 125-159.</p><p>Vaughan & Storey. 2000. JGS, 157: 1243-1256.</p>


2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Melissa R. Luna ◽  
◽  
Suzanne O'Connell ◽  
Joseph D. Ortiz ◽  
Michael C. Wizevich

2021 ◽  
Vol 41 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Jacqueline Bertlich ◽  
Nikolaus Gussone ◽  
Jasper Berndt ◽  
Heinrich F. Arlinghaus ◽  
Gerhard S. Dieckmann

AbstractThis study presents culture experiments of the cold water species Neogloboquadrina pachyderma (sinistral) and provides new insights into the incorporation of elements in foraminiferal calcite of common and newly established proxies for paleoenvironmental applications (shell Mg/Ca, Sr/Ca and Na/Ca). Specimens were collected from sea ice during the austral winter in the Antarctic Weddell Sea and subsequently cultured at different salinities and a constant temperature. Incorporation of the fluorescent dye calcein showed new chamber formation in the culture at salinities of 30, 31, and 69. Cultured foraminifers at salinities of 46 to 83 only revealed chamber wall thickening, indicated by the fluorescence of the whole shell. Signs of reproduction and the associated gametogenic calcite were not observed in any of the culture experiments. Trace element analyses were performed using an electron microprobe, which revealed increased shell Mg/Ca, Sr/Ca, and Na/Ca values at higher salinities, with Mg/Ca showing the lowest sensitivity to salinity changes. This study enhances the knowledge about unusually high element concentrations in foraminifera shells from high latitudes. Neogloboquadrina pachyderma appears to be able to calcify in the Antarctic sea ice within brine channels, which have low temperatures and exceptionally high salinities due to ongoing sea ice formation.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Camille Hayatte Akhoudas ◽  
Jean-Baptiste Sallée ◽  
F. Alexander Haumann ◽  
Michael P. Meredith ◽  
Alberto Naveira Garabato ◽  
...  

AbstractThe Atlantic sector of the Southern Ocean is the world’s main production site of Antarctic Bottom Water, a water-mass that is ventilated at the ocean surface before sinking and entraining older water-masses—ultimately replenishing the abyssal global ocean. In recent decades, numerous attempts at estimating the rates of ventilation and overturning of Antarctic Bottom Water in this region have led to a strikingly broad range of results, with water transport-based calculations (8.4–9.7 Sv) yielding larger rates than tracer-based estimates (3.7–4.9 Sv). Here, we reconcile these conflicting views by integrating transport- and tracer-based estimates within a common analytical framework, in which bottom water formation processes are explicitly quantified. We show that the layer of Antarctic Bottom Water denser than 28.36 kg m$$^{-3}$$ - 3 $$\gamma _{n}$$ γ n is exported northward at a rate of 8.4 ± 0.7 Sv, composed of 4.5 ± 0.3 Sv of well-ventilated Dense Shelf Water, and 3.9 ± 0.5 Sv of old Circumpolar Deep Water entrained into cascading plumes. The majority, but not all, of the Dense Shelf Water (3.4 ± 0.6 Sv) is generated on the continental shelves of the Weddell Sea. Only 55% of AABW exported from the region is well ventilated and thus draws down heat and carbon into the deep ocean. Our findings unify traditionally contrasting views of Antarctic Bottom Water production in the Atlantic sector, and define a baseline, process-discerning target for its realistic representation in climate models.


2021 ◽  
Vol 11 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Juan Moles ◽  
Shahan Derkarabetian ◽  
Stefano Schiaparelli ◽  
Michael Schrödl ◽  
Jesús S. Troncoso ◽  
...  

AbstractSampling impediments and paucity of suitable material for molecular analyses have precluded the study of speciation and radiation of deep-sea species in Antarctica. We analyzed barcodes together with genome-wide single nucleotide polymorphisms obtained from double digestion restriction site-associated DNA sequencing (ddRADseq) for species in the family Antarctophilinidae. We also reevaluated the fossil record associated with this taxon to provide further insights into the origin of the group. Novel approaches to identify distinctive genetic lineages, including unsupervised machine learning variational autoencoder plots, were used to establish species hypothesis frameworks. In this sense, three undescribed species and a complex of cryptic species were identified, suggesting allopatric speciation connected to geographic or bathymetric isolation. We further observed that the shallow waters around the Scotia Arc and on the continental shelf in the Weddell Sea present high endemism and diversity. In contrast, likely due to the glacial pressure during the Cenozoic, a deep-sea group with fewer species emerged expanding over great areas in the South-Atlantic Antarctic Ridge. Our study agrees on how diachronic paleoclimatic and current environmental factors shaped Antarctic communities both at the shallow and deep-sea levels, promoting Antarctica as the center of origin for numerous taxa such as gastropod mollusks.


Polar Biology ◽  
1990 ◽  
Vol 10 (6) ◽  
Author(s):  
Marta Estrada ◽  
Maximino Delgado
Keyword(s):  

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