scholarly journals A red bole zircon record of cryptic silicic volcanism in the Deccan Traps, India

Geology ◽  
2022 ◽  
Author(s):  
Liam O’Connor ◽  
Dawid Szymanowski ◽  
Michael P. Eddy ◽  
Kyle M. Samperton ◽  
Blair Schoene

Silicic magmas within large igneous provinces (LIPs) are understudied relative to volumetrically dominant mafic magmas despite their prevalence and possible contribution to LIP-induced environmental degradation. In the 66 Ma Deccan LIP (India), evolved magmatism is documented, but its geographic distribution, duration, and significance remain poorly understood. Zircons deposited in weathered Deccan lava flow tops (“red boles”) offer a means of indirectly studying potentially widespread, silicic, explosive volcanism spanning the entire period of flood basalt eruptions. We explored this record through analysis of trace elements and Hf isotopes in zircon crystals previously dated by U–Pb geochronology. Our results show that zircon populations within individual red boles fingerprint distinct volcanic sources that likely developed in an intraplate setting on cratonic Indian lithosphere. However, our red bole zircon geochemical and isotopic characteristics do not match those from previously studied silicic magmatic centers, indicating that they must derive from yet undiscovered or understudied volcanic centers associated with the Deccan LIP.

Author(s):  
Stephen Self ◽  
Millard F. Coffin ◽  
Michael R. Rampino ◽  
John A. Wolff

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Aleksandr D. Savelev ◽  
Andrei K. Khudoley ◽  
Sergey V. Malyshev

<p>Sette-Daban LIP-related event [<strong>1</strong>] was dated by U-Pb baddeleyite and Sm-Nd isochron methods, but very limited information has been published on the geochemical and isotopic compositions of the associated igneous rocks. This work presents a new dating and the largest geochemical base of samples from the Sette-Daban event.</p><p>Mafic sills of the Sette-Daban event are most widespread in the upper part of the Lakhanda Group and lower part of the Uy Group (Maya-Kyllakh zone). Two intrusions were dated by the U-Pb baddeleyite method, yielding ages of 1005 ± 4 Ma - Sakhara river and 974 ± 7 Ma - Allakh-Yun river [<strong>2</strong>]. Isotope dating of a sublatitudinal dike in the Belaya River area gave an age which overlaps the already known dating along the Sakhara river.</p><p>Studied samples from the rivers Yudoma and Allah-Yun confirmed the already obtained result from the previous work [<strong>3</strong>]. The Sette-Daban dolerite sills resemble low-Ti lavas of intraplate flood basalt provinces (e.g., Karoo, Siberian Traps) and possess IAB-like trace element patterns.</p><p>In turn, samples from the Belaya River are enriched more strongly and closer to the OIB distribution. The rare earth elements contents (e.g., La, Ce, Pr, Nd, Sm) in Belaya samples is 2-5 times higher than in Yudoma. However, εNd(T) values vary from 4.3 to 6.3 which corresponds to the already known range of values for the Sette-Daban complex.</p><p>Thus, detailed geochemical studies made it possible to identify a new zone (Belaya) in the Sette-Daban complex, which has significant differences from the previously obtained values.</p><p>The studies were supported by the Russian Science Foundation grant No. 19-77-10048.</p><p><strong> </strong></p><p>References:</p><p>[<strong>1</strong>] Ernst, R.E. Large Igneous Provinces. In Large Igneous Provinces; Ernst, R.E., Ed.; Cambridge University Press: Cambridge, UK, 2014; p. 653. ISBN 9780521871778.</p><p>[<strong>2</strong>] Rainbird, R.H.; Stern, R.A.; Khudoley, A.K.; Kropachev, A.P.; Heaman, L.M.; Sukhorukov, V.I. U-Pb geochronology of Riphean sandstone and gabbro from southeast Siberia and its bearing on the Laurentia-Siberia connection. Earth Planet. Sci. Lett. 1998, 164, 409–420. </p><p>[<strong>3</strong>] Savelev, A.D.; Malyshev, S.V.; Savatenkov, V.M.; Ignatov, D.D.; Kuzkina, A.D. Meso-Neoproterozoic Mafic Sills along the South-Eastern margin of the Siberian Craton, SE Yakutia: Petrogenesis, Tectonic and Geochemical features. Minerals 2020, 10, 805. </p>


Author(s):  
Scott E. Bryan ◽  
Teal R. Riley ◽  
Dougal A. Jerram ◽  
Christopher J. Stephens ◽  
Philip T. Leat

Author(s):  
Benjamin A. Black ◽  
Leif Karlstrom ◽  
Tamsin A. Mather

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