oceanic plateaus
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Geology ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hironao Matsumoto ◽  
Rodolfo Coccioni ◽  
Fabrizio Frontalini ◽  
Kotaro Shirai ◽  
Luigi Jovane ◽  
...  

The early to mid-Aptian was punctuated by episodic phases of organic-carbon burial in various oceanographic settings, which are possibly related to massive volcanism associated with the emplacement of the Ontong Java, Manihiki, and Hikurangi oceanic plateaus in the southwestern Pacific Ocean, inferred to have formed a single plateau called Ontong Java Nui. Sedimentary osmium (Os) isotopic compositions are one of the best proxies for determining the timing of voluminous submarine volcanic episodes. However, available Os isotopic records during the age are limited to a narrow interval in the earliest Aptian, which is insufficient for the reconstruction of long-term hydrothermal activity. We document the early to mid-Aptian Os isotopic record using pelagic Tethyan sediments deposited in the Poggio le Guaine (Umbria-Marche Basin, Italy) to precisely constrain the timing of massive volcanic episodes and to assess their impact on the marine environment. Our new Os isotopic data reveal three shifts to unradiogenic values, two of which correspond to black shale horizons in the lower to mid-Aptian, namely the Wezel (herein named) and Fallot Levels. These Os isotopic excursions are ascribed to massive inputs of unradiogenic Os to the ocean through hydrothermal activity. Combining the new Os isotopic record with published data from the lowermost Aptian organic-rich interval in the Gorgo a Cerbara section of the Umbria-Marche Basin, it can be inferred that Ontong Java Nui volcanic eruptions persisted for ~5 m.y. during the early to mid-Aptian.


2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
B. Storch ◽  
K. M. Haase ◽  
R. H. W. Romer ◽  
C. Beier ◽  
A. A. P. Koppers

AbstractExtension of the Azores Plateau along the Terceira Rift exposes a lava sequence on the steep northern flank of the Hirondelle Basin. Unlike typical tholeiitic basalts of oceanic plateaus, the 1.2 km vertical submarine stratigraphic profile reveals two successive compositionally distinct basanitic to alkali basaltic eruptive units. The lower unit is volumetrically more extensive with ~ 1060 m of the crustal profile forming between ~ 2.02 and ~ 1.66 Ma, followed by a second unit erupting the uppermost ~ 30 m of lavas in ~ 100 kyrs. The age of ~ 1.56 Ma of the youngest in-situ sample at the top of the profile implies that the 35 km-wide Hirondelle Basin opened after this time along normal faults. This rifting phase was followed by alkaline volcanism at D. João de Castro seamount in the basin center indicating episodic volcanic activity along the Terceira Rift. The mantle source compositions of the two lava units change towards less radiogenic Nd, Hf, and Pb isotope ratios. A change to less SiO2-undersaturated magmas may indicate increasing degrees of partial melting beneath D. João de Castro seamount, possibly caused by lithospheric thinning within the past 1.5 million years. Our results suggest that rifting of oceanic lithosphere alternates between magmatically and tectonically dominated phases.


2020 ◽  
Vol 81 ◽  
pp. 390-402 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jianli Tao ◽  
Liming Dai ◽  
Da Lou ◽  
Zhong-Hai Li ◽  
Shuhui Zhou ◽  
...  

LITOSFERA ◽  
2018 ◽  
pp. 692-705 ◽  
Author(s):  
Viktor N. Puchkov

The plume-dependent magmatism is widespread and well justified. The bulk of it is represented by flood basalts, basalts of oceanic islands (OIB), and basalts of oceanic plateaus (OPB), though the whole scope of plume magmatism is very diverse. A noticeable role among them is played also by acid (silicic) magmatic rocks - rhyolites and granites. Two main types of plume magmatism are recognized. The first belongs to Large Igneous Provinces (LIP) and is thought to be born at the Core-Mantle boundary within structures, called superswells, that produce giant, short-living mantle upwellings, resulting in abundant volcanism on the Earth’s surface. The second type is represented by linear volcanic chains characterized by regular age progressions. They are formed by single plumes - thin ascending mantle flows, acting during longer periods of time. It is shown that the abundance of silicic magmatism strongly depends on the type of the earth’s crust. Among flood basalts of continents, silicic magmatism is usually present, subordinate in volume to basalts and belongs to a bimodal type of magmatism. But in some cases LIP in continents are formed predominantly by silicic rocks; they are given the name Silicic LIPS, or SLIPS. In oceans, LIP are fundamentally basaltic with no considerable volume of silicic volcanics, if any. The time-progressive volcanic chains in continents are rare and usually comprise a noticeable silicic component. In oceans, the chains are composed mostly of basalts (OIB type), though in the top parts of volcanoes more acid and alkaline differentiates are present; usually they lack rhyolites and granites, except the cases of a presence of some strips of continental crust or anomalously thick oceanic crust. This review can lead to a thought of an important role of melting of continental crust in formation of plume-dependent rhyolite-granite magmatism. As for the Urals, the proofs for a presence of plume-dependent magmatism in its history were presented only recently. Among the plume episodes, some are characterized by presence of silicic components, in particular: Mashak (1380-1385 Ma), Igonino (707-732 Ma), Man’khambo (mainly Cambrian), Ordovician Kidryasovo, Stepninsky (Permian) and Urals-Siberian (Triassic).


2017 ◽  
Vol 13 (30) ◽  
pp. 199
Author(s):  
Coulibaly Inza ◽  
Kouamelan Alain Nicaise ◽  
Djro Sagbrou Chérubin ◽  
Coulibaly Yacouba

The southern part of Toumodi-Fètêkro greenstone belt is located in the Center - Southeast of Ivory Coast. Petrographic study of volcanic and plutonic rocks shows three units. The first unit is composed of basaltic to rhyolitic lavas which imply effusive character. Then we have volcanosedimentary unit composed of pyroclastic formations (lapilli tuff, breccia, ash deposit and ignimbrites) and the pillow-lavas. Indeed, the presence of this last shows clearly that an explosive volcanism and a submarine effusive volcanism have occurred during during the setting of Toumodi-Fètêkro belt. Plutonic unit is constituted of gabbroic to granitic rocks. Sericite, chlorite, epidote observed in these rocks are consistent with the impacts of greenschist facies metamorphism. The rocks of the southern part of the Toumodi-Fètêkro greenstone belt are formed in a subduction context rather than in oceanic plateaus context because of the old inheritance, sometimes of Archean age, found somewhere in theBirimiandomain. The lithologies of the southern part of Toumodi-Fètêkro meet elsewhere in the other Birimian greenstone belts. Also, these lithologies are affected by a hydrothermal alteration due to the abundant veins of quartz, carbonates, sericite, chlorite, epidote, sulphides and oxides. However, volcanic show in some places amphibolit facies metamorphism.


Author(s):  
Ganbat Erdenesaikhan ◽  
Akira Ishiwatari ◽  
Demberel Orolmaa ◽  
Shoji Arai ◽  
Akihiro Tamura

New geochemical and petrological results are presented for greenstones from the Erdenetsogt Formation hosted by the Tsetserleg accretionary terrane in the Hangay region, with particular emphasis on newly found picritic and andesitic rocks. These rocks occur mostly in the lower portion of the Erdenetsogt Formation as massive lavas, sills, and dykes closely associated with varicolored bedded ribbon cherts and siltstones. The protoliths of the studied greenstones comprise (1) plume-derived tholeiitic greenstones with oceanic plateau basalt affinity, (2) arc-derived, calc-alkaline andesites. The plume-derived rocks are characterized by chemical signatures such as slight LREE enrichment similar to that of tholeiitic OIB and the existence of ferropicrite with high FeO* (>14 wt%) and MgO (12–22 wt%), which is characteristic of large igneous provinces (LIPs), including oceanic plateaus. Therefore, their tholeiitic composition and high-Fe and -Ti contents require melting of the source mantle peridotite with addition of some recycled Fe- and Ti-rich basaltic material. The andesites are characterized by glassy texture, high MgO content (up to 7 wt%), and significant LREE enrichment with depletion in Nb and resemble sanukite type of high-magnesian andesite (HMAs). We infer that the Hangay tholeiitic greenstones probably represent an accreted upper section of an oceanic plateau that developed in the deep-water region of the Hangay-Henteypaleo-ocean in the Upper Silurian-Lower Devonian. The Hangay HMAs may have been produced by subduction of young oceanic plate after an oceanward back-stepping of the subduction zone that was a result of the collision during the Carboniferous of the oceanic plateau and the active continental margin of the Central Mongolian Massif.


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