Cretaceous high-potassium intrusive rocks in the Yueshan-Hongzhen area of east China: Adakites in an extensional tectonic regime within a continent

2004 ◽  
Vol 38 (5) ◽  
pp. 417-434 ◽  
Author(s):  
Qiang Wang ◽  
Ji-Feng Xu ◽  
Zhen-Hua Zhao ◽  
Zhi-Wei Bao ◽  
Wei Xu ◽  
...  
1990 ◽  
Vol 127 (5) ◽  
pp. 383-392 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. P. Turner ◽  
P. L. Hancock

AbstractThere are two thrust systems in the Southwest Pyrenees: a NW-SE trending, thin-skin system exposed in the post-Triassic cover and a larger, thick-skin system of NE-SW thrusts in the Palaeozoic basement. The ‘cover’ thrust system propagated and migrated both southward and westward in response to the non-orthogonal collision of Iberia with Europe during Palaeogene mountain building. The ‘basement’ thrust system is interpreted to be a longer-lived structure, initiated during the extensional tectonic regime in mid Cretaceous time, and inverted during the main episode of Pyrenean collision. A model in which interaction of the two thrust systems controlled the timing and magnitude of thrust-induced, flexural subsidence is presented. The development of the basement thrust system caused regional subsidence along the South Pyrenean foreland margin that was subsequently halted by local uplift associated with the west-migratingcover thrust system.


2014 ◽  
Vol 1010-1012 ◽  
pp. 1372-1375
Author(s):  
Zi Long Yue ◽  
Yan Li Gao ◽  
Zhao Ge Zeng

The intermediate-acidic intrusive rocks in Tongling area of Anhui province can be divided into two magmatic series, namely the shoshonitic series and the high-potassium(K) calc-alkaline series. The shoshonitic series is characterized by an association of pyroxene monzodiorites + monzodiorites + quartz monzonites, and high Rittmann indices. This series has common association with gold deposits. The high-potassium(K) calc-alkaline series is characterized by an association of diorite + quartz monzodiorites + granodiorites. It has lower Rittmann indices and REEs than the shoshonitic series and is associated with copper deposits. Results obtained from the studies show that the former is derived from the differentiation of the alkaline basic magma in mantle and the later is mixture between the differentiated mantle magma and crustal magma. The chronology of intermediate-acidic intrusive rocks is about 140Ma.


Author(s):  
Edith Fuentes-Guzmán ◽  
Eduardo González-Partida ◽  
Antoni CamprubÍ ◽  
Geovanny Hernández-Avilés ◽  
Janet Gabites ◽  
...  

The Cu- and Au-rich Tatatila–Las Minas IOCG skarn deposits in Veracruz (central-east Mexico) are circumscribed to the earliest stages of the Trans-Mexican Volcanic Belt (TMVB) and stand for a metallogenic province directly linked to its tectonomagmatic dynamics. This is the first well-documented case for such metallogenic province. These deposits were formed as skarns between rocks of the Mesozoic carbonate series and Miocene intermediate to acid hypabyssal rocks. New U-Pb zircon and 40Ar/39Ar ages provide evidence for four epochs of magmatic activity in the area: (1) early Permian (Artinskian), in association with the Paleozoic basement, (2) late Oligocene to early Miocene suite of pre-TMVB intrusive rocks, (3) middle to late Miocene suite of early TMVB-related intrusive rocks, and (4) Pliocene intrusive and extrusive rocks of the TMVB, possibly associated with the Los Humeros post-caldera stage. The obtained ages range between 24.60 ± 1.10 and 19.04 ± 0.69 Ma for stage 2, and between 16.34 ± 0.20 and 13.92 ± 0.22 Ma for stage 3. Stage 2 corresponds to a magmatic stage unheard of in the area, until this study. Only stage 3 rocks are associated with the IOCG skarn mineralization, with retrograde stages dated at 12.44 ± 0.09 (chromian muscovite, phyllic association) and 12.18 ± 0.21 Ma (zircon, potassic association). Therefore, the ages of stage-3 intrusive rocks are interpreted to date the formation of the prograde skarn associations (mostly ~15.4 to <14 Ma). The petrogenetic affinity of stage-2 and stage-3 rocks is about the same—the main difference has to do with higher Y and Yb contents in stage-3 rocks (although no affinity with within-plate granites was found), which is suggestive of an interaction of their parental magmas with alkaline magmas that most likely belong to the conterminous and contemporaneous Eastern Mexico Alkaline Province. Petrological indicators (elemental and isotopic) in Cenozoic rocks consistently point to intermediate to acid, metaluminous, I- and S-type rocks that were emplaced in a subduction-related continental arc, within the medium- to high-potassium calc-alkaline series, with high-silica adakitic signatures due associated to deep-sourced magmas that underwent crustal contamination to some degree. The various possible sources for the magmas with adakitic signature in this context can be narrowed down to two of them that are not mutually exclusive: adakitic derived from subducted slab melting and melting-assimilation-storage-homogenization (MASH)-derived adakites. Both sources are, in principle, capable of generating magmas that would eventually produce magmatic-hydrothermal mineralizing systems with an associated variety of ore deposit types, including IOCG. Also, both possible sources for adakites are compatible with the renewed steepening of the subducted slab after a period of flat subduction, for the earliest stage in the evolution of the TMVB.


1979 ◽  
Vol 16 (1) ◽  
pp. 167-181 ◽  
Author(s):  
G. T. Nixon ◽  
V. S. Papezik

The Colliers Peninsula, a typical area in the western part of the Harbour Main Group in eastern Newfoundland, is underlain by three steeply-dipping sequences of ash-flow tuffs 250–500 m thick, separated by clastic sediments, conformably overlain by subaerial mafic flows and cut by small bodies of high-level intrusive rocks rich in plagioclase phenocrysts. All rocks are of low metamorphic grade.The two lower pyroclastic sequences have a bulk composition of rhyolite and alkali rhyolite; they contain phenocrysts of albite, quartz, and biotite. Na/K ratios are highly variable; the albite crystals may be pseudomorphous after anorthociase. The upper sequence, rhyodacitic in bulk composition, has lower Si and higher Na; it lacks quartz and biotite phenocrysts but contains small amounts of calcic augite and altered olivine. The mafic flows (50% SiO2) show high Al and alkalies and low Ca and Ti. The porphyritic intrusives have 60–65% SiO2, but their bulk chemistry is otherwise similar to that of the ash-flow tuffs.The present composition of the rocks reflects complex chemical adjustments, both contemporaneous with and subsequent to the magmatic event. However, mineralogical and chemical data and trends considered to be a part of the original magmatic heritage are consistent with suggestions that the western (probably lower) part of the Harbour Main volcanic pile was formed in a continental, extensional tectonic environment.


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