Cyclical variation in composition in continental tholeiites of East Greenland

1989 ◽  
Vol 26 (3) ◽  
pp. 534-543 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. J. Hogg ◽  
J. J. Fawcett ◽  
J. Gittins ◽  
M. P. Gorton

The Prinsen of Wales Bjerge (PWB), part of the Tertiary volcanic province of East Greenland, consists of tholeiitic basalts overlain by alkalic basalts that were erupted 100–150 km west of the original axis of continental rifting and active ocean-floor development during the creation of the North Atlantic Ocean. They have many features of continental flood basalts but are somewhat enriched in Fe and in Ti relative to Fe and have slightly lower Al2O3. They have slight enrichments in the light rare-earth elements (La/Yb = 3–4). A nunatak within the PWB displays four cycles of tholeiitic basalt, each about 50 m thick, which are defined by trace-element variations (Ni, Cr, Sr, Zr, and Zr/Y). In three of the four cycles the lowermost flows are the most highly differentiated, and successive flows are increasingly primitive. These changes are thought to be the result of frequent injection of primitive, mantle-derived tholeiitic magma into small crustal magma chambers that contain evolved tholeiitic magma. The resultant mixing and expulsion of hybrid magma produce flows of small volume (0.01–0.03 km3) that display increasingly primitive character upward within each cycle (increasing Mg# and decreasing content of incompatible elements). This process is expected to be more efficient in small reservoirs than in the very large magma chambers that have been invoked by previous exponents of the differentiation–replenishment hypothesis. We suggest that cyclical volcanism in areas well back from the line of active rifting may be more common than is realized and is controlled by the fractionation–magma-replenishment process operating in numerous small reservoirs in an extensively fractured continental crust.

1969 ◽  
Vol 17 ◽  
pp. 61-64 ◽  
Author(s):  
Troels F.D. Nielsen ◽  
Símun D. Olsen ◽  
Bo M. Stensgaard

The Skaergaard intrusion (Fig. 1) is probably the most studied layered gabbro intrusion in the world (Wager & Deer 1939; Wager & Brown 1968; McBirney 1996; Nielsen 2004). The intrusion is c. 54.5 Ma old and was formed during the Palaeogene opening of the North Atlantic Ocean, intruding into the base of the East Greenland flood basalts. The intrusion is relatively small with a volume of c. 300 km3 (Nielsen 2004). Spectacular magmatic layering and systematic evolution in the compositions of liquidus phases and estimated melt compositions (e.g. Wager & Brown 1968) have made the intrusion the most studied example of the development of the ‘Fenner trend’ of iron enrichment in basaltic liquids (e.g. Thy et al. in press; Veksler in press).


1989 ◽  
Vol 157 ◽  
pp. 1-164
Author(s):  
L.M Larsen ◽  
W.S Watt ◽  
M Watt

The early Tertiary plateau basalts in East Greenland are situated on a continental margin and were erupted during continental break-up and initiation of sea-floor spreading in the North Atlantic. In the region stretching from Scoresby Sund southward to 69°N 40 000 km2of basalts with an average thickness of 1.5 km have been investigated by measuring and flow-to-flow sampling of 130 profiles, followed by major element geochemical analysis and microprobe analysis, trace element analysis and some Sr isotope data. The basalts rest on Mesozoic sediments in the east and on Precambrian gneiss in the west. Six basalt formations are defined: the Magga Dan, Milne Land and Geikie Plateau Formations form a lower regional sequence erupted in one volcanic episode from sites in the NW part of the region; the Rømer Fjord and Skrænterne Formations form an upper regional sequence erupted in a subsequent volcanic episode in which eruption sites moved SE to centres east of the present Atlantic coast; the Igtertivâ Formation and a coast-parallel dyke swarm formed in a third volcanic episode only recorded at the Atlantic coast. The lavas are essentially flat-lying; a narrow strip along the Atlantic coast is extensively block faulted. Single lava flows are extensive (max. 11 000 km2) and voluminous (max. 300 km3). They are well preserved, with metamorphism of the low zeolite facies. All the lavas and most of the dykes are fractionated tholeiitic basalts with Mg/(Mg+Fe2+) ratios of 0.66-0.39 and TiO2 = 1.2-4.5%. The major part (the 'main basalts', 96% by volume) have Mg ratios of 0.56-0.39, while only 4 vol.% are Mg-rich basalts with Mg ratios of 0.66-0.57. A nephelinitic tuff layer occurs at the base of the second sequence. A few dykes are alkaline. The Mg-rich basalts have microphenocrysts of olivine (FO90-70) and chromite, while the main basalts comprise both aphyric and porphyritic sequences. Phenocrysts of plagioclase (An88-37) are abundant, of olivine (FO80-57) are sparse but ubiquitous, and of augite (FS9-20) sparse and often absent. Groundmass phases are olivine (to FO3737), plagioclase (to An13, augite (to FS62), pigeonite (Fs26-50), titanomagnetite and ilmenite. All rocks contain several per cent fine-grained mesostasis. The phenocrysts frequently show disequilibrium textures and a wide range of compositions within one sample. Extrusion temperatures are calculated to 1280-1110°C, and densities to 2.68-2.78 g/cm3, increasing with fractionation. The volcanic episodes are demonstrated in systematic compositional variations with height in the basalt sequence. Each of the two major episodes started with a variety of lava compositions including Mg-rich basalts, followed by a thick sequence of 'main basalts' showing a systematic decrease of TiO2 and other incompatible elements with height, and ending with a reversal to higher TiO2 values. The third episode is not cyclic, and its products have changed incompatible element ratios. The Mg-rich basalts comprise depleted MORB type basalts, relatively enriched olivine tholeiites, and very enriched tholeiites (Mikis type basalt). Sr isotopes show 87Sr/86Sr ratios of 0.7034 in most basalts and 0.7045 in the Mikis type basalt, while some Si-rich basalts have ratios up to 0.7079. The East Greenland basalts are 'initial rifting' basalts very similar to those in Deccan. The magmas have equilibrated at low pressures in crustal magma chambers. The main basalts have fractionated ol + pl + cpx no matter whether they are aphyric or porphyritic. Simple crystal fractionation can account for sub-trends but not for the complete compositional variation of the main basalts. This is considered as resulting from fractionation in open magma chambers which were repeatedly filled, mixed and tapped. The decrease in TiO2 with height in each volcanic episode indicates increasing magma input rate and shorter residence time in the chamber, while the final reversal indicates the decline and cessation of activity. There is evidence for widespread crustal contamination (1-4%) in the magma chambers of the two lowest formations. Crustal contamination of magmas on the way to the surface occurred sporadically throughout both sequences. One case of magma mixing occurred when a Mg-rich basalt magma invaded the regional main basalt magma chamber. The Mg-rich basalts cannot be directly related to each other or to the main basalts. A petrogenetic scheme is suggested where the Mikis type basalt originated in, or contains an addition from, an undepleted or enriched mantle source. All the other magma types originated in a depleted mantle source by varying degrees and possibly depths of melting. Increasing degrees of melting are indicated for the types nephelinite - enriched olivine tholeiite – main basalt parent – MORB type basalt. The MORB type basalt may also be produced by melting of a residuum. The basalts of the third volcanic episode include another component of mantle or basaltic crust. The three recorded volcanic episodes are related to rifting events during the break-up of the North Atlantic continent, viewed as repeated attempts to straighten out a bend in the original line of opening. The two first rifting events failed while the third for a short while produced oceanic crust. Compared to other regions of the North Atlantic volcanic province the Scoresby Sund basalts are similar to basalts from Kangerdlugssuaq, northern East Greenland, West Greenland, the Faeroes, the Vøring Plateau and some basalts on lceland. The main magma source for the North Atlantic province was similar to that of the lceland hotspot, but enriched subcontinental lithosphere may also have participated in the stage of initial rifting. A correlation for the volcanic episodes throughout East Greenland and the Faeroes is proposed.


2020 ◽  
Vol 67 ◽  
pp. 107-146
Author(s):  
Paul Martin Holm ◽  
Niels-Ole Prægel

The Kærven Syenite Complex (KSC) is one of the oldest felsic intrusions in the Tertiary East Greenland province. Here we update our previous description of the KSC and supply a greatly expanded and comprehensive geochemical dataset. New data allow us to present a more detailed petrogenetic model for the evolution of the KSC and to investigate the geochemical characteristics of igneous cumulates subjected to loss and, occasionally, replacement of residual liquid. The KSC comprises eleven mappable units that generally young westwards. Rock types range from quartz syenite to quartz alkali feldspar syenite and alkali feldspar granite. Individual intrusive units are relatively narrow and steep-sided and are collectively suggested to represent a ring dyke complex. Basement gneiss and gabbro host rocks have locally contaminated the oldest quartz syenite KSC unit, but most of the main part of the complex escaped significant influence from host rocks. A late suite of E–W to NE–SW striking peralkaline dykes of trachytic to phonolitic compositions intrude the KSC. Compositions of the KSC rocks span a considerable range in SiO2, 59–73 wt%. Concentrations of several elements vary widely for a given SiO2 (especially at SiO2 < 66 wt%), and variation diagrams do not suggest a single model for the evolution of the units of the complex. A cumulative origin is envisaged for several KSC units. Geochemical modelling suggests that KSC magmas were derived from more than one primary magma, and that the complex evolved through a four-stage process: fractional crystallisation in precursory magma chambers was followed by final emplacement of each unit, establishment of a crystal/melt mush, expulsion of part of the residual melt and, finally, crystallisation of the remaining melt. Trace element disequilibria between alkali feldspar and host rocks in two closely associated quartz alkali feldspar syenite units indicate that highly evolved residual melt was replaced by a less evolved melt phase. Modelling of potential parent melt compositions to the Kærven magmas suggests an origin not in the Iceland plume asthenosphere, but rather in a moderately enriched source, possibly in the continental lithosphere. The course of melt evolution by fractional crystallisation is indicated to have taken place in magma chambers at depth, and repeated rise of magma into the upper crustal magma chambers and crystallisation there formed the KSC. Based on our survey of published geochemical data, the inferred parental magmas seem to have few equivalents in the North Atlantic Igneous Province and may have been generated mainly from melting of enriched dry lithospheric mantle of possibly Archaean age.


1975 ◽  
Vol 12 (7) ◽  
pp. 1196-1208 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jackson M. Barton Jr.

The Mugford Group is a sequence of volcanic and sedimentary rocks exposed within the Khaumayät (Kaumajet) Mountains of Labrador. Separated from an intensely deformed and deeply eroded Archean basement complex by an angular unconformity, these rocks are nearly everywhere flat-lying and only locally altered. The volcanic rocks within the Mugford Group are of three types: tholeiitic basalts, komatiitic basalts and greenstones. A phosphorus fractionation diagram indicates that the tholeiitic and komatiitic basalts may be differentiates of a common magma. The greenstones, however, have undergone a separate crystallization history, but plot within the field of tholeiitic basalts on a FMA diagram, suggesting they were originally tholeiites. K–Ar whole-rock ages show that the Mugford volcanics are at least 1490 m.y. old. Rb–Sr whole-rock isotopic analyses of the tholeiitic and komatiitic basalts and the greenstones define an isochron of 2369 ± 55 m.y. with an initial 87Sr/86Sr ratio of 0.7033 ± 0.0002. This age is interpreted as approximating the time of extrusion of the Mugford volcanics. The low initial 87Sr/86Sr ratio indicates that the magmas giving rise to these rocks were not appreciably contaminated with older crustal material.The Mugford volcanics are presently the oldest recognized continental flood basalts. Their extrusion apparently occurred contemporaneously with the intrusion of the Okhakh granite at Okhakh (Okak) Harbour, 25 km to the south. This suggests that while no regional metamorphism accompanied extrusion of these volcanics, some local igneous activity did occur at that time. The Mugford volcanics may represent the extrusive equivalents of numerous basic dikes that were intruded during the final stages of stabilization of the North Atlantic craton.


Voluminous outpourings of olivine and quartz tholeiite cover vast tracts of the western U.S.A, around the Columbia and Snake Rivers. Voluminous eruptive units within each province are petrographically and chemically homogeneous and generally lack significant lateral or temporal variation. These features suggest relatively homogeneous source regions. A possible scenario for the Snake River Plain involves extraction of tholeiitic melts from enriched spinel lherzolite mantle ( 87 Sr/ 86 Sr > 0.7058, 143 N d/ 144 Nd < 0.51252) which contains at least a component of 2.5 Ga material. Subsequent fractionation of olivine, plagioclase, apatite and magnetite in crustal magma chambers and simultaneous assimilation of crust ( ca . 20%) accounts for the isotopic variability in the more evolved ferrolatites and ferrobasalts. Unlike the olivine tholeiites these evolved volcanic rocks exhibit all the classic elemental and isotopic correlations consistent with an origin involving combined assimilation and fractional crystallization.


1997 ◽  
Vol 34 (12) ◽  
pp. 1566-1580 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ronald F. Emslie ◽  
Michael A. Hamilton ◽  
Charles F. Gower

The Michael Gabbro (1426 Ma) and the Shabogamo Gabbro (1459 Ma) represent two large diabase intrusive episodes that affected the northwestern margin of the northeastern Grenville Province. Both have sustained variable effects of subsequent Grenvillian metamorphism. Other broadly contemporaneous magmatic activity in the region includes the formation of Elsonian anorthosite–granitoid complexes (1.46–1.29 Ga) that intruded Churchill Province and Nain Province rocks to the north, the Harp dykes (1.27 Ga), and Mealy dykes (~1.25 Ga). Petrologic and geochemical data show that the Michael Gabbro and Shabogamo Gabbro are similar, with the latter displaying more cumulate rock characteristics, and the former having compositions closer to those of rapidly cooled magma. Both have compositions comparable to those of other continental diabases and to some continental flood basalts. Sr and Nd initial isotopic compositions of Michael Gabbro (εNd(1426 Ma) = −4.7 to −6.0, ISr(1426 Ma) = 0.7032–0.7044) and Shabogamo Gabbro (εNd(1459 Ma) = −4.0 to −5.5, ISr(1459 Ma) = 0.7020–0.7060) are alike and overlap, suggesting similar sources and processes of development. Comparisons with other nearly contemporary mafic suites in central and southern Labrador show that only the Mealy dykes have a distinctly more radiogenic isotopic signature. Paradoxically, other mafic suites that intrude older basement rocks north of the Grenville Front have less enriched Nd signatures than do those that intrude younger basement rocks south of the front. The argument is made that the subcontinental lithospheric mantle, and not crustal contamination, played the most influential role in evolution of the magmas.


Polar Record ◽  
1976 ◽  
Vol 18 (112) ◽  
pp. 76-77
Author(s):  
D. W. Matthews

This expedition to the Blosseville Kyst area of east Greenland was wholly geological, comprising several groups brought together under the leadership of Professor P. E. Brown of Aberdeen University. It aimed to follow up geological discoveries which had been made in 1971 by expeditions from Cambridge and Sheffield, and also to pursue several new lines of research directed primarily at relating the sediments and volcanic rocks in east Greenland to the birth of the North Atlantic Ocean. The expedition chartered mv Signalhorn from Martin Karlsen AS of Brandal, Norway, for a period of 52 days; after some delay, due to a mechanical emergency in the North Sea, she sailed from Aberdeen on 20 July. The journey was slow and rough and featured an abortive attempt to take the shorter route round north-east Iceland. On 26 July the east Greenland coast was sighted at lat 68 N in fine weather. Aputitq and the Kangerdlugssuaq area were beset by heavy pack ice, but good progress was made northwards along Blosseville Kyst through moderately open water about five miles offshore.


Author(s):  
Michael Larsen ◽  
Stefan Piasecki ◽  
Lars Stemmerik

NOTE: This article was published in a former series of GEUS Bulletin. Please use the original series name when citing this article, for example: Larsen, M., Piasecki, S., & Stemmerik, L. (2002). The post-basaltic Palaeogene and Neogene sediments at Kap Dalton and Savoia Halvø, East Greenland. Geology of Greenland Survey Bulletin, 191, 103-110. https://doi.org/10.34194/ggub.v191.5136 _______________ The Palaeogene flood basalts in East Greenland are part of the North Atlantic Igneous Province (NAIP) formed during continental rifting and opening of the northern North Atlantic (Saunders et al. 1997). Along the Blosseville Kyst in southern and central East Greenland the basalts are exposed onshore from Kangerlussuaq in the south to Scoresby Sund in the north (Larsen et al. 1989). The base of the volcanic succession is exposed at Kangerlussuaq and at Savoia Halvø whereas post-basaltic sediments are found at two isolated localities, Kap Dalton and Savoia Halvø (Fig. 2). These three outcrop areas are thus key sources for biostratigraphic data to constrain the onset and duration of the Palaeogene volcanism in East Greenland, and are widely used in reconstructions of the North Atlantic region during continental break-up (e.g. Clift et al. 1998; Dam et al. 1999). In August 2001 the Geological Survey of Denmark and Greenland (GEUS) carried out field work in the sedimentary successions at Kap Dalton and Savoia Halvø. This was the first visit by geologists to Kap Dalton since 1975, and it is expected that the new data will provide important new biostratigraphic information and help to refine models for the Palaeogene of the North Atlantic. This report, and the palynological study of the sediments immediately below the basalts at Savoia Halvø presented by Nøhr-Hansen & Piasecki (2002, this volume), present the preliminary results of the field work.


2009 ◽  
Vol 18 ◽  
pp. 1-126 ◽  
Author(s):  
Niels Henriksen ◽  
A.K. Higgins ◽  
Feiko Kalsbeek ◽  
T. Christopher R. Pulvertaft

The geological development of Greenland spans a period of nearly 4 Ga, from Eoarchaean to the Quaternary. Greenland is the largest island on Earth with a total area of 2 166 000 km2, but only c. 410 000 km2 are exposed bedrock, the remaining part being covered by a major ice sheet (the Inland Ice) reaching over 3 km in thickness. The adjacent offshore areas underlain by continental crust have an area of c. 825 000 km2. Greenland is dominated by crystalline rocks of the Precambrian shield, which formed during a succession of Archaean and Palaeoproterozoic orogenic events and stabilised as a part of the Laurentian shield about 1600 Ma ago. The shield area can be divided into three distinct types of basement provinces: (1) Archaean rocks (3200–2600 Ma old, with local older units up to> 3800 Ma) that were almost unaffected by Proterozoic or later orogenic activity; (2) Archaean terrains reworked during the Palaeoproterozoic around 1900–1750 Ma ago; and (3) terrains mainly composed of juvenile Palaeoproterozoic rocks (2000–1750 Ma in age). Subsequent geological developments mainly took place along the margins of the shield. During the Proterozoic and throughout the Phanerozoic major sedimentary basins formed, notably in North and North-East Greenland, in which sedimentary successions locally reaching 18 km in thickness were deposited. Palaeozoic orogenic activity affected parts of these successions in the Ellesmerian fold belt of North Greenland and the East Greenland Caledonides; the latter also incorporates reworked Precambrian crystalline basement complexes. Late Palaeozoic and Mesozoic sedimentary basins developed along the continent–ocean margins in North, East and West Greenland and are now preserved both onshore and offshore. Their development was closely related to continental break-up with formation of rift basins. Initial rifting in East Greenland in latest Devonian to earliest Carboniferous time and succeeding phases culminated with the opening of the North Atlantic Ocean in the late Paleocene. Sea-floor spreading was accompanied by extrusion of Palaeogene (early Tertiary) plateau basalts in both central West and central–southern East Greenland. During the Quaternary Greenland was almost completely covered by ice, and the present day Inland Ice is a relic from the Pleistocene ice ages. Vast amounts of glacially eroded detritus were deposited on the continental shelves around Greenland. Mineral exploitation in Greenland has so far encompassed cryolite, lead-zinc, gold, olivine and coal. Current prospecting activities in Greenland are concentrated on gold, base metals, platinum group elements, molybdenum, iron ore, diamonds and lead-zinc. Hydrocarbon potential is confined to the major Phanerozoic sedimentary basins, notably the large basins offshore North-East and West Greenland. While reserves of oil or gas have yet to be found, geophysical data combined with discoveries of oil seeps onshore have revealed a considerable potential for offshore oil and gas.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sarah-Jane Barnes ◽  
Eduardo Mansur ◽  
Philippe Pagé ◽  
Julien Meric ◽  
Jean-Philippe Arguin

&lt;p&gt;The composition of the magmas from which the chromites that form the massive chromite layers of the Stillwater, Great Dyke and Bushveld Complexes are of interest both to understand the economic importance of the resources in the layers (Cr and PGE), but also in understanding how these layers form.&amp;#160; Magmas that have been suggested as parental to the intrusions are boninites or crustally contaminated komatiites.&amp;#160; Another magma that could be considered in recognition of the continental setting of the Bushveld and Great Dyke is picrite associated with continental flood basalts. In order to investigate whether any of these magmas are suitable parental magmas for the chromites we have determined major and trace elements in komatiites of low metamorphic grade, boninites and chromites from low-Ti and high-Ti picrites of the Emeishan Provence.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;In order to test whether the chromites are in equilibrium with volcanic magmas we first modelled the major and minor element composition of the chromites that should have crystallized from the komatiite, boninites and picrite liquids using SpinMelt v2.&amp;#160; The compositions are approximately correct.&amp;#160; In terms of major and minor elements none of the chromites from the layered intrusions match boninite chromites.&amp;#160; The Great Dyke chromites are similar to chromites from komatiites.&amp;#160; The chromites the Bushveld are slightly more evolved with higher Ti contents and lower Cr# and resemble the chromites from the low-Ti picrites of Emeishan.&amp;#160; The Stillwater chromites have similar Ti contents to the Emeishan low-Ti picrites, but have lower Cr#.&amp;#160; Their compositions resemble chromite compositions reported from the North Atlantic Igneous Provence.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;Hafnium, Ta, Cu, Sn, Sc, Ti, Mn, Ni, Co, Mn, Ga, V and Zn were determined by LA-ICP-MS.&amp;#160; To compare the composition of the chromites an estimate of their partition coefficients into chromite was made based on the concentrations of elements in komatiite chromite divided by element in komatiite.&amp;#160; The elements were then arranged in order of compatibility and the chromites normalized to the median komatiite chromite.&amp;#160; Podiform chromites from boninites are depleted in most elements and none of the layered intrusions chromites resemble them.&amp;#160; The chromites from the Great Dyke have essentially flat patterns close to 1 times komatiite, but with negative Cu anomaly and a slight positive Sn anomaly.&amp;#160; The Bushveld and Stillwater chromites are richer in Al, Ga, V and Ti than the komatiite chromite and are depleted in Cu.&amp;#160; The patterns resemble the chromites form the low Ti-picrites form Sn to Zn, but differ from picrites from Hf to Cu.&amp;#160; The picrites are enriched in Hf, Ta and Cu.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;The chromite compositions suggest that boninite magmas are not involved in forming the chromites from layered intrusions.&amp;#160; The Great Dyke chromites appear to have a komatiitic affinity.&amp;#160; The Bushveld and Stillwater chromites appear to have a low-Ti picrite affinity.&lt;/p&gt;


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