A fission track thermochronological study of King George and Livingston islands, South Shetland Islands (West Antarctica)

This paper reports the dating of apatite fission tracks in eleven rock samples from the South Shetland Archipelago, an island arc located to the north-west of the Antarctic Peninsula. Apatites from Livingston Island were dated as belonging to the Oligocene (25.8 Ma: metasediments, Miers Bluff Format...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Antarctic Science
Main Authors: SELL, I., POUPEAU, G., GONZÁLEZ-CASADO, J.M., LÓPEZ-MARTÍNEZ, J.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Cambridge University Press (CUP) 2004
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Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0954102004001907
https://www.cambridge.org/core/services/aop-cambridge-core/content/view/S0954102004001907
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Summary:This paper reports the dating of apatite fission tracks in eleven rock samples from the South Shetland Archipelago, an island arc located to the north-west of the Antarctic Peninsula. Apatites from Livingston Island were dated as belonging to the Oligocene (25.8 Ma: metasediments, Miers Bluff Formation, Hurd Peninsula) through to the Miocene (18.8 Ma: tonalites, Barnard Point). Those from King George Island were slightly older, belonging to the Early Oligocene (32.5 Ma: granodiorites, Barton Peninsula). Towards the back-arc basin (Bransfield Basin), the apatite appears to be younger. This allows an opening rate of approximately 1.1 km Ma −1 (during the Miocene–Oligocene interval) to be calculated for Bransfield Basin. Optimization of the apatite data suggests cooling to 100 ± 10°C was coeval with the end of the main magmatic event in the South Shetland Arc (Oligocene), and indicates slightly different tectonic-exhumation histories for the different tectonic blocks.