Detrital Chromian Spinel Compositions Used to Reconstruct the Tectonic Setting of Provenance: Implications for Orogeny in the Canadian Cordillera

Author(s):  
H. O. Cookenboo (1), R. M. Bustin (
2018 ◽  
Vol 55 (12) ◽  
pp. 1339-1353
Author(s):  
Huichao Zhang ◽  
Yongfeng Zhu

Geological characteristics and geochemical analyses are reported for the early Carboniferous pillow basalt in the Huilvshan region (west Junggar, Northwest China), with the aim to indicate its petrogenesis, magma source characteristics, and tectonic implication. This pillow basalt consists of clinopyroxene and plagioclase with trace amounts of magnetite, apatite, and chromian spinel. It is tholeiitic in composition with low concentrations of Na2O + K2O (1.52–4.74 wt.%). Similar to the N-MORB, the samples of this pillow basalt have nearly flat chondrite-normalized REE patterns ((La/Yb)N = 0.87–1.47) with insignificant Eu anomalies (Eu/Eu* = 0.84–1.18), and show no obvious enrichments of LILEs and insignificant depletions in HFSEs. Petrology and geochemical characteristics suggest that this pillow basalt is the product of MORB-like magma derived from a depleted mantle corresponding to ≤4% partial melting of spinel lherzolite. SIMS analysis of the zircons separated from tuff interlayered with basalt gives a weighted average U–Pb age of 328 ± 3 Ma (MSWD = 1.4), which represents the magma eruption time in the Huilvshan region. From these observations, in combination with the previous work, we conclude that an extensional tectonic regime dominated the tectonic activity of west Junggar during early Carboniferous.


2005 ◽  
Vol 69 (1) ◽  
pp. 53-76 ◽  
Author(s):  
U. Bağci ◽  
O. Parlak ◽  
V. Höck

AbstractThe late Cretaceous Kızıldağ ophiolite forms one of the best exposures of oceanic lithospheric remnants of southern Neotethys to the north of the Arabian promontory in Turkey. The ultramafic to mafic cumulate rocks, displaying variable thickness (ranging from 165 to 700 m), are ductiley deformed, possibly in response to syn-magmatic extension during sea-floor spreading and characterized by wehrlite, olivine gabbro, olivine gabbronorite and gabbro. The gabbroic cumulates have an intrusive contact with the wehrlitic cumulates in some places. The crystallization order of the cumulus and intercumulus phases is olivine (Fo86–77)± chromian spinel, clinopyroxene (Mg#92–76), plagio-clase(An95–83), orthopyroxene(Mg#87–79). The olivine, clinopyroxene, orthopyroxene and plagioclase in ultramafic and mafic cumulate rocks seem to have similar compositional range. This suggests that these rocks cannot represent a simple crystal line of descent. Instead the overlapping ranges in mineral compositions in different rock types suggest multiple magma generation during crustal accretion for the Kızıldağ ophiolite. The presence of high Mg# of olivine, clinopyroxene, orthopyroxene, and the absence of Ca-rich plagioclase as an early fractionating phase co-precipitating with forsteritic olivine, suggest that the Kızıldağ plutonic suite is not likely to have originated in a mid-ocean ridge environment. Instead the whole-rock and mineral chemistry of the cumulates indicates their derivation from an island arc tholeiitic (IAT) magma. All the evidence indicates that the Kızıldağ ophiolite formed along a slow-spreading centre in a fore-arc region of a suprasubduction zone tectonic setting.


Minerals ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
pp. 14 ◽  
Author(s):  
Andrei Y. Barkov ◽  
Vladimir N. Korolyuk ◽  
Larisa P. Barkova ◽  
Robert F. Martin

Dunite–harzburgite–olivine-bearing orthopyroxenite successions in the subvolcanic Chapesvara-I and Chapesvara-II intrusions in the Serpentinite Belt, western Kola Peninsula, are notably magnesian. The mean Mg# value (whole-rock) is 86.6, and the olivine is Fo84−89. The upper contact facies (UCF) displays a lower Mg# (81.6). It consists of grains of Fo92 and abundant chromian spinel, implying rapid crystallization of an almost unfractionated melt. On average, the whole-rock Al2O3/TiO2 value is 22.45, close to 22.9 (UCF) and to the primitive mantle, ~22. The rise of primitive ultramafic magma presumably occurred in a special tectonic setting at the boundary of the Paleoproterozoic Lapland Granulite Terrane and the Belomorian Composite Terrane of Archean age. The Chapesvara suite resembles examples of the Al-undepleted komatiites in the Barberton Belt, South Africa, with magmas of up to 30–35% MgO. The UCF rock yields an anomalously low molar MgO/SiO2 value, close to that of dunitic rocks located at the center of the Chapesvara-II body. This rock is the most primitive, as indicated by the maximum Fo content of olivine, the lowest value of (Gd/Yb)N, 0.52, and the lowest abundances of middle to heavy rare-earth elements (REE) in the chondrite-normalized spectrum. The crystallization of the Chapesvara-II sill-like intrusion likely proceeded in two stages, which are evident from the olivine compositions varying from the maximum Fo92 (UCF) to Fo≤89.5 (the central dunite zone). At Stage 1, the UCF rock (Fo92) crystallized first, close to the upper contact. The area of crystallization then shifted to a central portion of the Chapesvara-II body, in which the dunitic zone (Fo89.5) formed in situ (Stage 2). The compositional variations in chromian spinel are consistent with this suggestion. Two crystallization trends were recognized. The type-1 trend displays a relative maximum or minimum close to the center, and then diverges into two linear subtrends directed upward and downward. This pattern is manifested in the variations of Mg# in olivine and chromian spinel, the whole-rock contents of Al and Ca, and in levels of incompatible elements: Ti, V, Zr, Y, and Hf. The type-2 trend decreases or increases uniformly from top to bottom. Variations in amount of Ni in olivine, the Fe3+# index in chromian spinel, and in values of Mg# (rocks), follow a type-2 trend. Variations in total amounts of REE, Nb, and Th, which gradually increase downward, are also related to a type-2 trend. Thus, a contrasting development and possible interference of the two types of evolutionary trends were observed in the crystallization history of the Chapesvara-II sill-like body. A double-front crystallization, hitherto unreported, involved two fronts moving upward and downward, respectively. The upward subtrend appeared to be of subordinate importance, whereas the extent of fractional crystallization of the downward front was much greater. Crystallization proceeded from the top to the bottom, presumably because of the preferential loss of heat at the roof. Variations in the Fe3+# index indicate that the level of fO2 also increased downward with progressive crystallization. Convection cells were presumably the key mechanism of accumulation of the crystallizing olivine grains to form the central dunite zone close to the center of the sill-like intrusion. The observed characteristics of the Chapesvara complex indicate the existence of a primitive-mantle source and imply a highly magnesian composition of intruding magma not only for Chapesvara, but also for the Pados-Tundra layered complex and associated suites of the Serpentinite Belt in the Kola Peninsula.


2001 ◽  
Vol 38 (1) ◽  
pp. 91-103 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jochen E Mezger ◽  
Robert A Creaser ◽  
Philippe Erdmer ◽  
Stephen T Johnston

The Coast Belt of the northern Cordillera in Canada is the locus of the boundary between accreted and ancient North American margin rocks. The largest exposure of metasedimentary rocks in the Coast Belt is the Kluane metamorphic assemblage (KMA), a northwest-striking belt 160 km long of graphitic mica–quartz schist and gneiss with minor interfoliated olivine serpentinite. The KMA does not appear to correlate with other sedimentary or metamorphic rock assemblages in the Canadian Cordillera. To determine its tectonic setting and protolith provenance, we analyzed trace element, rare earth elements, and neodymium isotope compositions of the KMA, of the adjacent pericratonic Aishihik metamorphic suite (AMS) of the Yukon–Tanana terrane, and of adjacent slates of the Dezadeash Formation (DF), filling a Late Jurassic – Early Cretaceous flysch basin. The εNd(0) values of analyzed KMA samples range from –1.4 to –5.6 and depleted mantle model ages (TDM) range from 1.16 to 1.45 Ga. KMA samples are intermediate between more evolved AMS samples (average εNd(0) –25, TDM = 2.6 Ga) and more juvenile DF samples (εNd(0) = +1.9, TDM = 0.95 Ga). The intermediate characteristics of the KMA samples cannot be linked to a known source region and are interpreted to reflect homogeneous mixing from predominantly juvenile and minor evolved sedimentary sources. A compatible tectonic setting is a back-arc basin within influence of a continental source. Eastward subduction of the KMA beneath ancient North America collapsed the back-arc basin by latest Cretaceous time.


1993 ◽  
Vol 30 (1) ◽  
pp. 48-59 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alan D. Smith

Volcanogenic massive sulphide deposits at Anyox in the Tracy Arm terrane of the Canadian Cordillera are associated with a sequence of tholeiitic basalts with minor intercalated basaltic andesite tuffs and siliceous sediments. Sm–Nd and Pb–Pb systematics indicate an Early to Middle Jurassic age. The tholeiites are characterized by normal mid-ocean-ridge basalt to weak island-arc tholeiite trace element signatures with slight enrichment in large-ion lithophile elements and depletion in high-field-strength elements, high 207Pb/204Pb, and εNd(170 Ma) values of +8.2 to +8.4. The mineralized sequence is conformably overlain by argillaceous sediments and minor limestones. These features, combined with the location of the strata and similarities with the Spider Peak Formation of the Methow terrane, indicate an origin in a narrowing marginal basin that once separated superterranes I and II.


Island Arc ◽  
2010 ◽  
Vol 20 (1) ◽  
pp. 125-137 ◽  
Author(s):  
Shoji Arai ◽  
Hidenobu Okamura ◽  
Kazuyuki Kadoshima ◽  
Chima Tanaka ◽  
Kenji Suzuki ◽  
...  

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document