New petrological and geochemical data on mid-Paleozoic island-arc volcanics of northern Sierra Nevada, California: evidence for a continent-based island arc

1989 ◽  
Vol 26 (12) ◽  
pp. 2465-2478 ◽  
Author(s):  
O. Rouer ◽  
H. Lapierre ◽  
C. Coulon ◽  
A. Michard

The mid-Paleozoic volcanics of northern Sierra Nevada consist of the Sierra Buttes rhyolites, the Taylor basalts and andesites, and the Keddie Ridge basalt–latite–rhyolite suite. The Sierra Buttes calc-alkaline rhyolites display strong light rare-earth element enrichment and negative εNd values. The Taylor basalts and andesites in the northern Hough and Genesee blocks exhibit calc-alkaline affinities (REE rare-earth element patterns highly enriched in LREE), whereas in the southern Hough block they are tholeiitic (flat rare-earth element patterns). The abundance of silicic lavas, the low εNd values of both the Sierra Buttes and Taylor volcanics and the δ18O values of the Sierra Buttes rhyolite and Bowman Lake trondjhemite provide evidence that the northern Sierra Nevada island arc was continent based. The Keddie Ridge differentiated volcanics, characterized by high Zr, Y, Nb, K, and light rare-earth elements, are geochemically similar to a shoshonite suite. Their eruption at the end of the mid-Paleozoic volcanic episode suggests a reversal of subduction, uplift, and block faulting in the island arc.The mid-Paleozoic volcanics of the northern Sierra Nevada are thought to represent the remnant of a mature island arc because calc-alkaline rocks predominate over tholeiitic ones, the lavas display a K enrichment with time, and the volcanics are evolved in their isotopes, compared with rocks erupted in young or primitive island arcs.




Geology ◽  
1993 ◽  
Vol 21 (4) ◽  
pp. 363 ◽  
Author(s):  
Gary H. Girty ◽  
Andrew D. Hanson ◽  
Aaron S. Yoshinobu ◽  
Charles Knaack ◽  
Diane Johnson




Lithos ◽  
2018 ◽  
Vol 308-309 ◽  
pp. 65-82 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. Smith ◽  
J. Kynicky ◽  
Cheng Xu ◽  
Wenlei Song ◽  
J. Spratt ◽  
...  


2015 ◽  
Vol 3 (40) ◽  
pp. 10566-10573 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yufei Hu ◽  
Sabah K. Bux ◽  
Jason H. Grebenkemper ◽  
Susan M. Kauzlarich

ThezTof Yb14MnSb11is improved by the introduction of a light rare earth element, RE3+(RE = Pr, Sm) with partially filled f-levels. The carrier concentration is reduced upon substituting RE3+for Yb2+, adding one electron to the system and improving thezTvalues 30–40% over that of the pristine material.



2020 ◽  
Vol 117 ◽  
pp. 103294 ◽  
Author(s):  
Meng Feng ◽  
Wenlei Song ◽  
Jindrich Kynicky ◽  
Martin Smith ◽  
Clinten Cox ◽  
...  


1998 ◽  
Vol 35 (8) ◽  
pp. 951-963 ◽  
Author(s):  
J Dostal ◽  
D A Robichaud ◽  
B N Church ◽  
P H Reynolds

Eocene volcanic rocks of the Buck Creek basin in central British Columbia are part of the Challis-Kamloops volcanic belt extending from the United States across British Columbia to central Yukon. The volcanic rocks include two units, the Buck Creek Formation, composed of high-K calc-alkaline rocks with predominant andesitic composition, and the overlying Swans Lake unit made up of intraplate tholeiitic basalts. Whole rock 40Ar/39Ar data for both units show that they were emplaced at 50 Ma. They have similar mantle-normalized trace element patterns characterized by a large-ion lithophile element enrichment and Nb-Ta depletion, similar chondrite-normalized rare earth element patterns with (La/Yb)n ~4-14 and heavy rare earth element fractionation, and overlapping epsilonNd values (2.4-3.1) and initial Sr-isotope ratios ( ~ 0.704). These features suggest derivation of these two units from a similar mantle source, probably garnet-bearing subcontinental lithosphere. The differences between tholeiitic and calc-alkaline suites can be due, in part, to differences in the depth of fractional crystallization and the crystallizing mineral assemblage. Fractional crystallization of the calc-alkaline magmas began at a greater (mid-crustal) depth and included fractionation of Fe-Ti oxides. The volcanic rocks are probably related to subduction of the Farallon plate under the North American continent in a regime characterized by transcurrent movements and strike-slip faulting.



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