scholarly journals New occurrences of undersaturated syenites from the southern Blosseville Coast, East Greenland

1991 ◽  
Vol 38 ◽  
pp. 153-159
Author(s):  
C. K. Brooks

This note reports hitherto undescribed nepheline-sodalite syenites from I. C. Jacobsen Fjord and Ryberg Fjord. Numerous syenite erratics have been encountered at I. C. Jacobsen Fjord. They are believed to come from a single intrusion in the immediate neighbourhood which has not yet been located. They consist Iargely of perthite with nepheline, sodalite, salitic pyroxene, hastingsitic amphibole, sphene and Fe-Ti oxide. They resemble the pulaskites of the Kangerdlugssuaq intrusion. On the side of the Sorgenfri Gletscher at the head of Ryberg Fjord an extensive area of peralkaline syenite has been found. It consists of perthite, nepheline, sodalite, aegirine, arfvedsonite and very Fe-rich biotite. It is cut by tholeiitic dykes of a late generation of the coastal dyke swarm. These syenites bridge a gap between previously known examples and suggest that the magma type was much commoner than thought originally.

2021 ◽  
pp. SP518-2021-22
Author(s):  
Martin B. Klausen

AbstractDecompressional release of magma at continental triple rift breakup LIP centers, above mantle plume stems, result in highly magmatic settings. As a particularly well exposed example, it is proposed that the East Greenland coastal dyke swarm preserves a structural record of how dyke dilations versus tectonic extension increased upon approaching its Kangerlussuaq triple rift center. Such more magmatic breakup is reflected by how abruptly its volcanic rifted margin transitions into 100% dykes, and in this case up to 100 km farther inland than its geophysically determined continent-ocean boundary. Correspondingly high magma flux through an igneous Kap Edward Holm center sustained the lateral injection of up to 150 km-long dykes, evidenced by increased cut-off dyke thicknesses - below which there is an anomalously low abundance of thinner dykes - that conform to the cube root of their thermal arrest distance. Only the thickest and thereby longest dyke injections linked up with a more southerly located igneous Imilik center of an en echelon offset dyke swarm, the complex transition into which is also addressed. This highly magmatic central plumbing system is further compared to similar volcanic zones across Iceland and other post-Paleozoic breakup LIPs, in order to contextualize its importance.


2011 ◽  
Vol 24 ◽  
pp. 1-96 ◽  
Author(s):  
C. Kent Brooks

The Palaeogene North Atlantic Igneous Province is among the largest igneous provinces in the world and this review of the East Greenland sector includes large amounts of information amassed since previous reviews around 1990. The main area of igneous rocks extends from Kangerlussuaq (c. 67°N) to Scoresby Sund (c. 70°N), where basalts extend over c. 65 000 km2 , with a second area from Hold with Hope (c. 73°N) to Shannon (c. 75°N). In addition, the Ocean Drilling Project penetrated basalt at five sites off South-East Greenland. Up to 7 km thickness of basaltic lavas have been stratigraphically and chemically described and their ages determined. A wide spectrum of intrusions are clustered around Kangerlussuaq, Kialeeq (c. 66°N) and Mesters Vig (c. 72°N). Layered gabbros are numerous (e.g. the Skaergaard and Kap Edvard Holm intrusions), as are under- and oversaturated syenites, besides small amounts of nephelinite-derived products, such as the Gardiner complex (c. 69°N) with carbonatites and silicate rocks rich in melilite, perovskite etc. Felsic extrusive rocks are sparse. A single, sanidine-bearing tuff found over an extensive area of the North Atlantic is thought to be sourced from the Gardiner complex. The province is famous for its coast-parallel dyke swarm, analogous to the sheeted dyke swarm of ophiolites, its associated coastal flexure, and many other dyke swarms, commonly related to central intrusive complexes as in Iceland. The dyke swarms provide time markers, tracers of magmatic evolution and evidence of extensional events. A set of dykes with harzburgite nodules gives unique insight into the Archaean subcontinental lithosphere. Radiometric dating indicates extrusion of huge volumes of basalt over a short time interval, but the overall life of the province was prolonged, beginning with basaltic magmas at c . 60 Ma and continuing to the quartz porphyry stock at Malmbjerg (c. 72°N) at c. 26 Ma. Indeed, activity was renewed in the Miocene with the emplacement of small volumes of basalts of the Vindtoppen Formation to the south of Scoresby Sund. Although the basalts were extruded close to sea level, this part of East Greenland is a plateau raised to c. 2 km, but the timing of uplift is controversial. Superimposed on the plateau is a major dome at Kangerlussuaq. East Greenland presents a rich interplay between magmatic and tectonic events reflecting the birth of the North Atlantic Ocean. It was active over a much longer period (36 Ma) than other parts of the province (5 Ma in the Hebrides, Northern Ireland and the Faroe Islands) and contains a wider range of products, including carbonatites, and felsic rocks tend to be granitic rather than syenitic. As expected, there are many similarities with Iceland, the present-day expression of activity in the province. Differences are readily explained by higher production rates and the thicker lithospheric lid during the early stages of development in East Greenland. The igneous and related activity clearly results from plate-tectonic factors, but the relationship is not understood in detail. In particular, the nature of the underlying mantle processes, primarily the presence or absence of a plume, is still not resolved.


1978 ◽  
Vol 90 ◽  
pp. 141-146
Author(s):  
J.G Mitchell

Nine basaltic dykes were sampled by coring during geological reconnaissance of the south-east coast of Greenland (Bridgwater et al., 1977) between Angmagssalik (65°40') and Nordfjord (fig. 49). The samples were initially collected for palaeomagnetic investigations (Beckmann,1977). In the field it was assumed that all the fresh basic dykes in the region were Tertiary in age and represented a southern continuation of the coastal dyke swarm described by Wager & Deer (1938). The timing of dyke injection is very important as a possibie indication of the initial break-up of the original North Atlantic mass. Furthermore, it was assumed that the major coast-parallel dyke swarm (for example site 26 & 28, see fig. 49) was the continuation of the more intense Tertiary dyke swarm reported by Wager & Deer (1938) further north, while the more sporadic dykes with other trends were presumed also to belong to the same general period of injection. The preliminary palaeomagnetic studies by Beckmann (1977) showed no consistent differences between dykes grouped according to their trends.


1938 ◽  
Vol 75 (1) ◽  
pp. 39-46 ◽  
Author(s):  
L. R. Wager ◽  
W. A. Deer

As a result of three recent expeditions to East Greenland a remarkable dyke swarm, following closely the general direction of the coast, has been found to run from the neighbourhood of Scoresby Sound to Angmagssalik, a distance of 500 miles. The dykes are dolerites of various kinds and for the most part they are intruded into a thick Tertiary basalt series and the underlying metamorphic compled.


1974 ◽  
Vol 114 ◽  
pp. 1-16
Author(s):  
K Binzer ◽  
S Karup-Møller

Ferri-sepiolite has been found in low temperature fracture veins in volcanic rocks. The veins are composed of an early calcite-quartz generation and a late generation of calcite, quartz, chalcedony and minor amounts of ferri-sepiolite. The late generation developed simultaneously with deformation of the early minerals. Fluid inclusion studies on the associated calcite give a temperature of formation of the early generation of 65°-80°C. Secondary inclusions in calcite which may have formed simultaneously with the late generation homogenize at temperatures between 40 and 50° C. The mineral veins probably formed from circulating meteoric waters. Optical and other physical properties of the ferri-sepiolite together with X-ray crystallographic and chemical data of the mineral are compared with the similar properties of ferri-sepiolite from East Greenland.


1938 ◽  
Vol 75 (4) ◽  
pp. 189-189 ◽  
Author(s):  
Alex. L. Du Toit
Keyword(s):  

Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document