Timing of crustal melting and magma emplacement at different depths: insights from the Permian in the Western Alps

Author(s):  
Paola Manzotti ◽  
Florence Bégué ◽  
Barbara Kunz ◽  
Daniela Rubatto ◽  
Alexey Ulianov

<p>The pre-Alpine basement of the Adriatic plate in the Southern Alps exposes an exceptionally complete section across the continental crust (Ivrea Verbano: lower crust; Serie dei Laghi: upper crust). The section was weakly reworked during Jurassic extension and Cretaceous to Miocene Alpine shortening. The Insubric Line, an Alpine crustal-scale south-vergent backthrust, separates the Southern Alps from the Alpine nappe stack. The pre-Alpine basement of the Adriatic palaeomargin is intensely reworked in this stack, and is now part of the Sesia-Dent Blanche nappes (Manzotti et al. 2014) and other, smaller, Adria-derived units (e.g. Emilius).</p><p>The less deformed part of the Sesia-Dent Blanche nappes are the IIDK and Valpelline Series. Based on lithological similarities, they have been correlated with the Ivrea-Verbano Zone (Carraro et al. 1970). This equivalence has been confirmed by subsequent studies, including detailed U-Pb zircon ages of metamorphic (Kunz et al., 2018) and magmatic events. The other units of the Sesia-Dent Blanche nappes (the Arolla Series, the Gneiss Minuti, and the Eclogitic Micaschists) have been pervasively reworked during the Alpine orogeny, from greenschist to eclogite-facies. Identification of the age and nature of their pre-Alpine protoliths, and of the grade and age of their pre-Alpine metamorphism heavily relies on field and petrological data on key outcrops, supported by U-Pb dating.</p><p>If the IIDK and Valpelline Series represent the lower Adriatic crust, the other units may derive from the upper Adriatic crust, i.e. may be similar to the Serie dei Laghi in the Southern Alps. Alternatively, they may also represent pieces of the Adriatic lower crust that were pervasively re-hydrated during the Jurassic extension and/or the Alpine subduction (Engi et al., 2018), thus allowing re-equilibration at HP conditions during Alpine deformation.</p><p>This contribution will summarize a range of field, petrological, and geochronological data (obtained by LA-ICP MS on zircon, combined with in situ-oxygen isotope data measured by SIMS). This data set reveals significant differences in the timing of crustal melting, as well as magma emplacement at different depths. It can be concluded that the history of the Adriatic crust in the Alpine stack is comparable with that of the Southern Alps, with implications for the mechanical behaviour of the crust during the Alpine orogeny.</p><p> </p><p>Manzotti et al. (2014). Swiss Journal of Geosciences, 107, 309-336</p><p>Carraro et al. (1970). Memorie della Società Geologica Italiana, 9, 19-224</p><p>Kunz et al. (2018). International Journal of Earth Sciences, 107, 203-229</p><p>Engi et al. (2018). Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems, 19, 865-881</p>

2020 ◽  
Vol 113 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Michel Ballèvre ◽  
Audrey Camonin ◽  
Paola Manzotti ◽  
Marc Poujol

Abstract The Briançonnais Domain (Western Alps) represented the thinned continental margin facing the Piemonte-Liguria Ocean, later shortened during the Alpine orogeny. In the external part of the External Briançonnais Domain (Zone Houillère), the Palaeozoic basement displays microdioritic intrusions into Carboniferous sediments and andesitic volcanics resting on top of the Carboniferous sediments. These magmatic rocks are analysed at two well-known localities (Guil volcanics and Combarine sill). Geochemical data show that the two occurrences belong to the same calc-alkaline association. LA-ICP-MS U–Pb ages have been obtained for the Guil volcanics (zircon: 291.3 ± 2.0 Ma and apatite: 287.5 ± 2.6 Ma), and the Combarine sill (zircon: 295.9 ± 2.6 Ma and apatite: 288.0 ± 4.5 Ma). These ages show that the calc-alkaline magmatism is of Early Permian age. During Alpine orogeny, a low-grade metamorphism, best recorded by lawsonite-bearing veins in the Guil andesites, took place at about 0.4 GPa, 350 °C in the External Briançonnais and Alpine metamorphism was not able to reset the U–Pb system in apatite. The Late Palaeozoic history of the Zone Houillère is identical to the one recorded in the Pinerolo Unit, located further East in the Dora-Maira Massif, and having experienced a garnet-blueschist metamorphism during the Alpine orogeny. The comparison of these two units allows for a better understanding of the link between the Palaeozoic basements, mostly subducted during the Alpine convergence, and their Mesozoic covers, generally detached at an early stage of the convergence history.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Julian-Christopher Storck ◽  
Jörn-Frederik Wotzlaw ◽  
Ozge Karakas ◽  
Peter Brack ◽  
Axel Gerdes ◽  
...  

<p>Tracing the origin and evolution of magmas on their pathway through the lithosphere is key to understanding the magmatic processes that eventually produce eruptions. For ancient magmatic provinces, isotope-geochemical tracers are powerful tools to probe the source regions and magma-crust interaction during ascent and storage.</p><p>We present new hafnium isotopic compositions of ID-TIMS dated zircons to trace the evolution of the Middle Triassic magmatic province in the Southern Alps (northern Italy) at high temporal resolution [1]. Systematic changes in hafnium isotopic composition with time reveal a coherent temporal evolution from depleted mantle signatures towards crust-dominated signatures within less than four million years. This trend can be ascribed to progressive influence of a crustal source, incorporated into the reservoir from which these zircons crystallized. Towards the end of the magmatic episode, the εHf compositions abruptly revert within one-million-years back towards more juvenile compositions mainly recorded by the mafic to intermediate intrusive pulses (e.g. Monzoni and Predazzo), the effusive climax of basaltic lavas and the post-intrusive ash beds (e.g. Punta Grohmann) in the Dolomite region. We interpret the variation of Hf-isotopic signatures over time as a protracted contamination signal induced by interaction of the mantle-derived magmas with the lower crust.</p><p>The dataset obtained in this study is further implemented into a two-component mixing model employing a range of potential crust and mantle endmember Hf isotope signatures and Hf concentrations which is directly translated into crustal melt/total melt (=sum of crustal and mantle-derived melt) ratios over time. Based on these observations we explored the thermal evolution and crustal melting as a function of time, lithology, water content and magma flux for a lower crustal magmatic system by numerical modelling. Dykes and sills of basaltic composition are incrementally emplaced at the mantle-crust boundary, which leads to changes in crustal over mantle melt ratios over time. Initial intrusions of basaltic dykes into the relatively cold lower crust cause only limited crustal melting and assimilation but ensuing magma injections into progressively hotter crust results in more extensive partial melting and assimilation of crustal material. Subsequent intrusions into the magmatic lower-crustal roots cannibalize previous intrusions with progressively less isotopic contrast due to dilution with mantle-derived magmas. This is potentially accompanied by an increase in magma flux, e.g. by delamination of dense lower crustal cumulates into the subcontinental lithospheric mantle.</p><p>The observed trends in hafnium isotopic composition therefore do not necessarily require tectonic re-organizations or changes in mantle sources. Instead these trends may trace variations in mantle-crust interaction during thermally induced chemical maturation of the lower crustal magmatic roots progressively replacing ancient pelitic to mafic lower crustal lithologies by juvenile cumulates.</p><p> </p><p>[1] Storck, J.-C., Wotzlaw, J.-F., Karakas, O., Brack, P., Gerdes, A., Ulmer, P. Hafnium isotopic record of mantle-crust interaction in an evolving continental magmatic system, Earth and Planetary Science Letters, <em>(in press)</em>.</p>


2000 ◽  
Vol 83 (3) ◽  
pp. 1356-1365 ◽  
Author(s):  
David McAlpine ◽  
Dan Jiang ◽  
Trevor M. Shackleton ◽  
Alan R. Palmer

Responses to sound stimuli that humans perceive as moving were obtained for 89 neurons in the inferior colliculus (IC) of urethan-anesthetized guinea pigs. Triangular and sinusoidal interaural phase modulation (IPM), which produced dynamically varying interaural phase disparities (IPDs), was used to present stimuli with different depths, directions, centers, and rates of apparent motion. Many neurons appeared sensitive to dynamic IPDs, with responses at any given IPD depending strongly on the IPDs the stimulus had just passed through. However, it was the temporal pattern of the response, rather than the motion cues in the IPM, that determined sensitivity to features such as motion depth, direction, and center locus. IPM restricted only to the center of the IPD responsive area, evoked lower discharge rates than when the stimulus either moved through the IPD responsive area from outside, or up and down its flanks. When the stimulus was moved through the response area first in one direction and then back in the other, and the same IPDs evoked different responses, the response to the motion away from the center of the IPD responsive area was always lower than the response to the motion toward the center. When the IPD was closer at which the direction of motion reversed was to the center, the response to the following motion was lower. In no case did we find any evidence for neurons that under all conditions preferred one direction of motion to the other. We conclude that responses of IC neurons to IPM stimuli depend not on the history of stimulation, per se, but on the history of their response to stimulation, irrespective of the specific motion cues that evoke those responses. These data are consistent with the involvement of an adaptation mechanism that resides at or above the level of binaural integration. We conclude that our data provide no evidence for specialized motion detection involving dynamic IPD cues in the auditory midbrain of the mammal.


Author(s):  
Colby Dickinson

In his somewhat controversial book Remnants of Auschwitz, Agamben makes brief reference to Theodor Adorno’s apparently contradictory remarks on perceptions of death post-Auschwitz, positions that Adorno had taken concerning Nazi genocidal actions that had seemed also to reflect something horribly errant in the history of thought itself. There was within such murderous acts, he had claimed, a particular degradation of death itself, a perpetration of our humanity bound in some way to affect our perception of reason itself. The contradictions regarding Auschwitz that Agamben senses to be latent within Adorno’s remarks involve the intuition ‘on the one hand, of having realized the unconditional triumph of death against life; on the other, of having degraded and debased death. Neither of these charges – perhaps like every charge, which is always a genuinely legal gesture – succeed in exhausting Auschwitz’s offense, in defining its case in point’ (RA 81). And this is the stance that Agamben wishes to hammer home quite emphatically vis-à-vis Adorno’s limitations, ones that, I would only add, seem to linger within Agamben’s own formulations in ways that he has still not come to reckon with entirely: ‘This oscillation’, he affirms, ‘betrays reason’s incapacity to identify the specific crime of Auschwitz with certainty’ (RA 81).


2017 ◽  
Vol 39 (2) ◽  
pp. 265-276 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kas Saghafi

In several late texts, Derrida meditated on Paul Celan's poem ‘Grosse, Glühende Wölbung’, in which the departure of the world is announced. Delving into the ‘origin’ and ‘history’ of the ‘conception’ of the world, this paper suggests that, for Derrida, the end of the world is determined by and from death—the death of the other. The death of the other marks, each and every time, the absolute end of the world.


2019 ◽  
Vol 188 (1) ◽  
pp. 95-146
Author(s):  
Martin Bohatý ◽  
Dalibor Velebil

Adalbert Wraný (*1836, †1902) was a doctor of medicine, with his primary specialization in pediatric pathology, and was also one of the founders of microscopic and chemical diagnostics. He was interested in natural sciences, chemistry, botany, paleontology and above all mineralogy. He wrote two books, one on the development of mineralogical research in Bohemia (1896), and the other on the history of industrial chemistry in Bohemia (1902). Wraný also assembled several natural science collections. During his lifetime, he gave to the National Museum large collections of rocks, a collection of cut precious stones and his library. He donated a collection of fossils to the Geological Institute of the Czech University (now Charles University). He was an inspector of the mineralogical collection of the National Museum. After his death, he bequeathed to the National Museum his collection of minerals and the rest of the gemstone collection. He donated paintings to the Prague City Museum, and other property to the Klar Institute of the Blind in Prague. The National Museum’s collection currently contains 4 325 samples of minerals, as well as 21 meteorites and several hundred cut precious stones from Wraný’s collection.


Author(s):  
Ngoc Anh Nguyen

The analysis of a data set of observation for Vietnamese banks in period from 2011 - 2015 shows how Capital Adequacy Ratio (CAR) is influenced by selected factors: asset of the bank SIZE, loans in total asset LOA, leverage LEV, net interest margin NIM, loans lost reserve LLR, Cash and Precious Metals in total asset LIQ. Results indicate based on data that NIM, LIQ have significant effect on CAR. On the other hand, SIZE and LEV do not appear to have significant effect on CAR. Variables NIM, LIQ have positive effect on CAR, while variables LLR and LOA are negatively related with CAR.


2019 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. 5-14
Author(s):  
Carlos Alvaréz Teijeiro

Emmanuel Lévinas, the philosopher of ethics par excellence in the twentieth century, and by own merit one of the most important ethical philosophers in the history of western philosophy, is also the philosopher of the Other. Thereby, it can be said that no thought has deepened like his in the ups and downs of the ethical relationship between subject and otherness. The general objective of this work is to expose in a simple and understandable way some ideas that tend to be quite dark in the philosophical work of the author, since his profuse religious production will not be analyzed here. It is expected to show that his ideas about the being and the Other are relevant to better understand interpersonal relationships in times of 4.0 (re)evolution. As specific objectives, this work aims to expose in chronological order the main works of the thinker, with special emphasis on his ethical implications: Of the evasion (1935), The time and the Other (1947), From the existence to the existent (1947), Totality and infinity: An essay on exteriority (1961) and, last, Otherwise than being, or beyond essence (1974). In the judgment of Lévinas, history of western philosophy starting with Greece, has shown an unusual concern for the Being, this is, it has basically been an ontology and, accordingly, it has relegated ethics to a second or third plane. On the other hand and in a clear going against the tide movement, our author supports that ethics should be considered the first philosophy and more, even previous to the proper philosophize. This novel approach implies, as it is supposed, that the essential question of the philosophy slows down its origin around the Being in order to inquire about the Other: it is a philosophy in first person. Such a radical change of perspective generates an underlying change in how we conceive interpersonal relationships, the complex framework of meanings around the relationship Me and You, which also philosopher Martin Buber had already spoken of. As Lévinas postulates that ethics is the first philosophy, this involves that the Other claims all our attention, intellectual and emotional, to the point of considering that the relationship with the Other is one of the measures of our identity. Thus, “natural” attitude –husserlian word not used by Lévinas- would be to be in permanent disposition regarding to the meeting with the Other, to be in permanent opening state to let ourselves be questioned by him. Ontology, as the author says, being worried about the Being, has been likewise concerned about the Existence, when the matter is to concern about the particular Existent that every otherness supposes for us. In conclusion it can be affirmed that levinasian ethics of the meeting with the Other, particular Face, irreducible to the assumption, can contribute with an innovative looking to (re)evolving the interpersonal relationships in a 4.0 context.


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