ORIGIN AND EVOLUTION OF THE SW-MEXICAN CONTINENTAL CRUST: EVIDENCES FROM DETRITAL ZIRCON U-PB AGES AND HF ISOTOPIC EVOLUTION

2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
José Guadalupe Cavazos Tovar ◽  
◽  
Arturo Gómez-Tuena ◽  
Mattia Parolari
2018 ◽  
Vol 483 (1) ◽  
pp. 165-182 ◽  
Author(s):  
Oliver Jagoutz ◽  
Pierre Bouilhol ◽  
Urs Schaltegger ◽  
Othmar Müntener

AbstractMagmatic arcs associated with subduction zones are the dominant active locus of continental crust formation, and evolve in space and time towards magmatic compositions comparable to that of continental crust. Accordingly, the secular evolution of magmatic arcs is crucial to the understanding of crust formation processes. In this paper we present the first comprehensive U–Pb, Hf, Nd and Sr isotopic dataset documenting c. 120 myr of magmatic evolution in the Kohistan-Ladakh paleo-island arc. We found a long-term magmatic evolution that is controlled by the overall geodynamic of the Neo-Tethys realm. Apart from the post-collisionnal melts, the intra-oceanic history of the arc shows two main episodes (150–80 Ma and 80–50 Ma) of distinct geochemical signatures involving the slab and the sub-arc mantle components that are intimately linked to the slab dynamics.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Inês Pereira ◽  
Craig D. Storey ◽  
Robin Strachan ◽  
Hugo Moreira ◽  
James Darling ◽  
...  

<p>Plate tectonics is responsible for shaping the Earth’s surface, influencing the geological, hydrological and atmospheric cycles. However, there is no consensus on when plate tectonics initiated: was it fully operational during the Archean or did it not develop until the Proterozoic?</p><p>Much of what is currently known about the secular evolution of Earth’s continental crust and its links to plate tectonics has been recovered from detrital minerals. This is related to the incomplete rock record; the detrital record allows access to information from eroded and unexposed terrains. Most studies have relied on the detrital zircon record, but it is still unclear if the coincidence in age peaks with periods of supercontinent assembly reflects episodic continental growth or bias due to selective preservation of new crust within collisional orogenic belts. Furthermore, because zircon mostly grows in high-temperature conditions, it mostly calibrates magmatic cycles. To understand the evolution of plate tectonics and to assess its influence on continental crust preservation, we developed a new proxy, relevant to a range of metamorphic conditions, including HP-LT.</p><p>We investigate the U-Pb distribution ages of detrital rutile, from a range of modern stream sediments and siliciclastic units at sub-amphibolite facies metamorphic grade. Rutile mostly forms in collisional orogens and, by comparison with the zircon record, we can test the existence of a preservation bias. Zircon and rutile age distributions from our sample sets show a significant correlation, both peaks and troughs, that can only be reconciled if the detrital zircon record reflects a preservation bias that occurred during supercontinent assembly.</p><p>We further present new U-Pb and trace element data from detrital rutile within two clastic sedimentary units, preserved at sub-greenschist facies conditions in NW Scotland. These are the Torridon (Tonian) and the Ardvreck (Cambrian) groups, whose detrital zircon ages span a significant period between 3 and 1 Ga. By applying Zr-in-rutile thermometry and comparing it to the preserved metamorphic record, we show that both low and high dT/dP conditions can be inferred since at least 2.1 Ga.</p><p>Combining the existence of paired metamorphism up to 2.1 Ga with the periodic preservation of the continental crust throughout most of the Earth’s history implies that one-sided subduction, a hallmark of plate tectonics, has operated since at least the late Paleoproterozoic, and that supercontinent assembly during and after this period has been driven by plate tectonic mechanisms.</p>


2020 ◽  
Vol 538 ◽  
pp. 116206 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sameer Ranjan ◽  
Dewashish Upadhyay ◽  
Kamal Lochan Pruseth ◽  
Jayanta K. Nanda

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Zhigang Zeng ◽  
Zuxing Chen ◽  
Yuxiang Zhang

Abstract Episodic supercontinental amalgamation has profoundly influenced the evolution of the geosphere, hydrosphere, atmosphere and biosphere. However, the timing of supercontinent formation has mainly been constrained by the global age spectra of detrital zircon. Here, we show that the zircons in back-arc volcanic rocks not only reflect the evolution of local magmatism but also contain a record of global continental amalgamation events. We found that the young (<100 ka) zircons in volcanic rocks from the Okinawa Trough have old (108 Ma to 2.7 Ga) inherited zircon, which were captured as the magma ascended through the rifting continental crust. Moreover, the ages of the inherited zircons correspond to five supercontinent amalgamation events. Specifically, the Archaean inherited zircons, which have positive ɛHf(t) and low δ18O values, correspond to the formation of juvenile global continental crust. In contrast, the negative ɛHf(t) and high δ18O values of post-Archaean inherited zircons indicate that their parental magma contained recycled, old crust due to the enhanced crustal thickening and crust-mantle interactions during supercontinent assembly. Therefore, inherited zircons in back-arc volcanic rocks not only reflect the evolution of local magmatism but also contain a record of global supercontinental amalgamation events.


Geology ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shanan E. Peters ◽  
Craig R. Walton ◽  
Jon M. Husson ◽  
Daven P. Quinn ◽  
Oliver Shorttle ◽  
...  

Rock quantity and age are fundamental features of Earth’s crust that pertain to many problems in geoscience. Here we combine new estimates of igneous rock area in continental crust from the Macrostrat database (https://macrostrat.org/) with a compilation of detrital zircon ages in order to investigate rock cycling and crustal growth. We find that there is little or no decrease in igneous rock area with increasing rock age. Instead, igneous rock area in North America exhibits four distinct Precambrian peaks, remains low through the Neoproterozoic, and then increases only modestly toward the recent. Peaks in Precambrian detrital zircon age frequency distributions align broadly with peaks in igneous rock area, regardless of grain depositional age. However, detrital zircon ages do underrepresent a Neoarchean peak in igneous rock area; young grains and ca. 1.1 Ga grains are also overrepresented relative to igneous area. Together, these results suggest that detrital zircon age distributions contain signatures of continental denudation and sedimentary cycling that are decoupled from the cycling of igneous source rocks. Models of continental crustal evolution that incorporate significant early increase in volume and increased sedimentation in the Phanerozoic are well supported by these data.


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