BASALTIC MAGMA GENESIS AND MANTLE SOURCES BENEATH TWO CENOZOIC VOLCANOES, MT. EARLY AND SHERIDAN BLUFF, EAST ANTARCTICA

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yuyu Li ◽  
◽  
K.S. Panter ◽  
John L. Smellie ◽  
Jerzy S. Blusztajn ◽  
...  
2011 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. 335-338
Author(s):  
Y. Kurihara ◽  
M. Takahashi ◽  
J. Sato

Abstract Activity ratios among 238U-230Th-226Ra in the products from Izu arc volcanoes, Japan, were observed in order to estimate the time scale of magmatic processes and the magma generation for Izu arc volcanism. Activity ratios of 238U/230Th and 226Ra/230Th in the basaltic and andesitic products from Izu arc volcanoes were greater than unity, being enriched in 238U and 226Ra relative to 230Th. The 226Ra/230Th activity ratio versus 238U/230Th activity ratio diagram for these products showed positive correlation, suggesting that the 238U-230Th-226Ra disequilibria occurred during the magma genesis by the additions of U- and Ra-rich fluids derived from the subducting slab by dehydration to the mantle wedge. The 230Th-226Ra radioactive disequilibria observed in the basaltic and andesitic products imply a short period of time (<8000 years) between the magma genesis and the eruption. The majority of rhyolitic products was considered to be almost in equilibrium of 238U=230Th=226Ra. The observation that 238U-230Th-226Ra for the rhyolite are in radioactive equilibrium suggested that the rhyolitic magma from Izu arc was generated in the partial melting of the earth crust heated by the basaltic magma of high temperature.


1999 ◽  
Vol 11 (3) ◽  
pp. 338-352 ◽  
Author(s):  
E.V. Mikhalsky ◽  
A.A. Laiba ◽  
B.V. Beliatsky ◽  
K. Stüwe

Mount Willing in the Prince Charles Mountains (East Antarctica) is part of the Fisher Volcano–plutonic complex which formed as part of the global-scale Grenvillian mobile belt system. Mount Willing is composed of four rock complexes: 1) a metamorphic sequence, 2) gabbro intrusions, 3) deformed felsic intrusives, and 4) abundant post-metamorphic dykes and veins. Three rock types constitute the metamorphic sequence: amphibole–biotite felsic plagiogneiss, mafic to intermediate biotite–amphibole schist, and biotite paragneiss. The bulk composition of the mafic schists classifies them as tholeiitic basalts, and rarely as basaltic andesites or andesites. Index mg ranges widely from 47 to 71. Concentrations of TiO2, P2O5, and high-field strength elements are high in some rocks. These rocks are thought to have been derived from enriched (subcontinental) mantle sources. Sm–Nd and U–Pb isotopic data indicate a series of Mesoproterozoic thermal events between 1100 and 1300 Ma. In particular, these events occurred at 1289 ± 10 Ma (volcanic activity), at 1177 ± 16 Ma (tonalite intrusion), at 1112.7 ± 2.4 and at 1009 ± 54 Ma (amphibolite facies metamorphic events). Rb–Sr systematics also indicates a thermal overprint at 636 ± 13 Ma. Mafic schists show low initial 877Sr/86Sr ratios between 0.7024 and 0.7030. Felsic rocks show higher Sri values between 0.7037 and 0.7061. Basaltic andesite metavolcanic and plutonic rocks form a calc-alkaline evolutionary trend, and probably originated from subduction-modified mantle sources in a convergent plate margin environment. An oceanic basin may have existed in central Prince Charles Mountains about 1300 Ma ago and was closed as a result of continental collision around 1000 to 800 Ma.


2020 ◽  
Vol 36 (7) ◽  
pp. 2092-2110
Author(s):  
YANG WenJian ◽  
◽  
YU HongMei ◽  
ZHAO Bo ◽  
CHEN ZhengQuan ◽  
...  

Rb-Sr, Sm-Nd and U-Th-Pb isotopic data for Precambrian granitoids (i.e. granites and intermediate calc-alkaline plutonic rocks) from Greenland, Scotland and Zimbabwe are used to assess the relative contributions to magma genesis of various source materials. Ancient continental crustal contributions are identified by negative e N d values in the magmas at time of formation. Initial 87 Sr/ 86 Sr (Sr 1 ,) values identify crustal contributions as derived from deep (low Rb/Sr) or upper (high Rb/Sr) crust. Pb isotopic data, expressed as model ( 238 U / 204 Pb) values, permit the distinction between deep (low U/Pb) and upper (high U/Pb) crustal contributions. However, it is not usually possible to distinguish between mantle (low Rb/Sr) and deep crustal sources using Sr 1 values. In contrast, Nd and Pb isotopic data permit such a distinction to be made. The granitoids isotopically analysed for the present study range from calc-alkaline types with mantle or mixed mantle-crust isotopic characteristics (for example, late Archaean orthogneisses from west Greenland) to true granites probably produced solely by anatexis of ancient sialic crust (for example, Badcall Quay red granite, northwest Scotland; Qorqut granite, west Greenland; Mont d’Or granite, Zimbabwe).


2020 ◽  
Vol 39 (6) ◽  
pp. 82-97
Author(s):  
A.Yu. Martynov ◽  
◽  
Yu.A. Martynov ◽  
A.I. Malinovskii ◽  
◽  
...  

Identification of magma sources as well as its role in creating the diversity of magma compositions still remains one of the fundamental petrological problems. In our work, on the basis of new comprehensive isotope-geochemical and mineralogical data, we made an attempt to reconstruct the contribution of pyroxenite mantle source in the Oligocene basaltic magma genesis of the northern part of East Sikhote Alin volcanic belt. The most important indicators of this source are significant variations the first order transit elements ratios (Zn/Fe = 11–17, Zn/Mn = 6–10, Cr/Ni (1.8–6) and concentration of Ni (2000–3600 г/т) in olivine. LIL elements behavior suggests the presence of amphibole in pyroxenite substrate. The data obtained can be useful for the correct reconstruction of the magma generation and the geodynamic environment of this territory at the Late Cenozoic.


Author(s):  
Donald J. DePaolo ◽  
Frank V. Perry ◽  
W. Scott Baldridge

ABSTRACTTemporal and spatial variations in the Nd isotopic compositions of Tertiary caldera-forming rhyolite tuffs, and Cretaceous and Tertiary granites of the western U.S.A. are used as a basis for a model that accounts for the observed proportions of crustal versus mantle contributions to silicic magmas in terms of two parameters: the ambient crustal temperature and the rate of supply of basaltic magma from the mantle. The crustal contribution to silicic igneous rocks is measured in terms of the Neodymium Crustal Index (NCI). The relationships between crustal temperature, basalt supply and NCI are quantified using a model of a magma chamber undergoing continuous recharge, wall-rock assimilation and fractional crystallisation. From the model, a critical value of the ratio of basalt recharge-to-assimilation, (r/a)c, is deduced, which increases with decreasing crustal temperature. The r/a value must exceed (r/a)c to allow the volume of differentiated magma to increase, a prerequisite for developing large volumes of silicic magma. Strongly peraluminous (or S-type) magmas (NCI = 0·8–1), form under conditions of high crustal temperature and low basalt supply. Metaluminous or I-type granites form over a wide range of conditions (NCI = 0·1–1), generally where basalt supply is substantial. In individual long-lived volcanic centres, the large-volume high-silica ignimbrites are associated with the highest r/a and lowest NCI values, indicating that these magmas are typically differentiates of mantle-derived basaltic parents.


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