Geochemistry and origin of the Neoproterozoic Natkusiak Flood Basalts and related Franklin Sills, Victoria Island, Arctic Canada

The Natkusiak continental flood basalts and Franklin sills of Victoria Island preserve an exceptional record of the ca. 716–723 Ma Franklin large igneous province and are synchronous with major climatic variations and breakup of the supercontinent Rodinia. The Natkusiak Formation basalts record an e...

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Main Authors: Beard, Charles, Scoates, James, Weis, Dominique, Bedard, Jean, Dell'Oro, Trent
Format: Report
Language:unknown
Published: EarthArXiv 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.17605/osf.io/haryt
https://eartharxiv.org/haryt/
id ftdatacite:10.17605/osf.io/haryt
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spelling ftdatacite:10.17605/osf.io/haryt 2023-05-15T15:19:36+02:00 Geochemistry and origin of the Neoproterozoic Natkusiak Flood Basalts and related Franklin Sills, Victoria Island, Arctic Canada Beard, Charles Scoates, James Weis, Dominique Bedard, Jean Dell'Oro, Trent 2018 https://dx.doi.org/10.17605/osf.io/haryt https://eartharxiv.org/haryt/ unknown EarthArXiv https://dx.doi.org/10.1093/petrology/egy004 CC-By Attribution 4.0 International Physical Sciences and Mathematics Earth Sciences Geochemistry FOS Earth and related environmental sciences Preprint Text article-journal ScholarlyArticle 2018 ftdatacite https://doi.org/10.17605/osf.io/haryt 2021-11-05T12:55:41Z The Natkusiak continental flood basalts and Franklin sills of Victoria Island preserve an exceptional record of the ca. 716–723 Ma Franklin large igneous province and are synchronous with major climatic variations and breakup of the supercontinent Rodinia. The Natkusiak Formation basalts record an early phase of discontinuous rubbly flows (<100 m, low-Ti Type 1 magmas) overlain by a thicker series of extensive tholeiitic sheet flows (~1100 m, high-Ti Type 2 magmas). Coeval intrusions hosted by underlying Shaler Supergroup sedimentary rocks are differentiated low-Ti Type 1 Franklin sills and doleritic high-Ti Type 2 sills, both of which show correlations in isotope plots with the northernmost basalts on Victoria Island. Whole-rock Pb-Sr-Nd-Hf isotopic compositions from 66 samples indicate that the earliest magmas (Type 1) had similar primary melt compositions (Fo90 olivine) to oceanic island basalts and incorporated up to 10% granitoid basement (initial eNd = –0.8 to –7, Nb/La = 0.42 to 0.67), a relatively weak continental signature compared to many other continental flood basalt provinces. Type 2 doleritic sills and the northern sheet flow basalts incorporated up to 5% granitoid (initial eNd = +0.9 to +5.5), consistent with a waning continental influence during maturation of the magmatic system. Radiogenic isotope ratios are not correlated with indices of fractional crystallisation, which indicates that the continental material was either dispersed within the melt source, or that magmas were heterogeneously contaminated prior to differentiation. In the southwestern part of Victoria Island, Type 1 basalts show negligible continental influence (Nb/La = 0.81 to 0.94) and have unusually high initial eNd ratios (+4.4 to +11.8) that are decoupled from initial eHf (+0.8 to +11.1). These radiogenic eNd compositions persist throughout the southern volcanic stratigraphy and indicate involvement of a component with high time-integrated Sm/Nd that lacked correspondingly high Lu/Hf. We suggest that the source region for the southwestern Natkusiak basalts and related sills included isotopically matured oceanic crust, which was recycled through the asthenospheric mantle into a laterally heterogeneous plume. The distinct trace element signatures of the southern and northern sources became attenuated with the onset of voluminous melting (corresponding to emplacement of the Type 2 doleritic sills and sheet flow basalts) and may reflect contributions from hydrous eclogitic material emplaced into the lithospheric mantle during the ca. 1.9 Ga Wopmay Orogeny. As both the northern and southern volcanic rocks exhibit contrasting isotopic signatures throughout the preserved stratigraphy, the magma plumbing system must have limited lateral mixing and homogenisation, which allowed for the expression of distinct mantle source signatures in the high-level sills and basaltic lavas. Report Arctic Victoria Island victoria island DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology) Arctic Canada
institution Open Polar
collection DataCite Metadata Store (German National Library of Science and Technology)
op_collection_id ftdatacite
language unknown
topic Physical Sciences and Mathematics
Earth Sciences
Geochemistry
FOS Earth and related environmental sciences
spellingShingle Physical Sciences and Mathematics
Earth Sciences
Geochemistry
FOS Earth and related environmental sciences
Beard, Charles
Scoates, James
Weis, Dominique
Bedard, Jean
Dell'Oro, Trent
Geochemistry and origin of the Neoproterozoic Natkusiak Flood Basalts and related Franklin Sills, Victoria Island, Arctic Canada
topic_facet Physical Sciences and Mathematics
Earth Sciences
Geochemistry
FOS Earth and related environmental sciences
description The Natkusiak continental flood basalts and Franklin sills of Victoria Island preserve an exceptional record of the ca. 716–723 Ma Franklin large igneous province and are synchronous with major climatic variations and breakup of the supercontinent Rodinia. The Natkusiak Formation basalts record an early phase of discontinuous rubbly flows (<100 m, low-Ti Type 1 magmas) overlain by a thicker series of extensive tholeiitic sheet flows (~1100 m, high-Ti Type 2 magmas). Coeval intrusions hosted by underlying Shaler Supergroup sedimentary rocks are differentiated low-Ti Type 1 Franklin sills and doleritic high-Ti Type 2 sills, both of which show correlations in isotope plots with the northernmost basalts on Victoria Island. Whole-rock Pb-Sr-Nd-Hf isotopic compositions from 66 samples indicate that the earliest magmas (Type 1) had similar primary melt compositions (Fo90 olivine) to oceanic island basalts and incorporated up to 10% granitoid basement (initial eNd = –0.8 to –7, Nb/La = 0.42 to 0.67), a relatively weak continental signature compared to many other continental flood basalt provinces. Type 2 doleritic sills and the northern sheet flow basalts incorporated up to 5% granitoid (initial eNd = +0.9 to +5.5), consistent with a waning continental influence during maturation of the magmatic system. Radiogenic isotope ratios are not correlated with indices of fractional crystallisation, which indicates that the continental material was either dispersed within the melt source, or that magmas were heterogeneously contaminated prior to differentiation. In the southwestern part of Victoria Island, Type 1 basalts show negligible continental influence (Nb/La = 0.81 to 0.94) and have unusually high initial eNd ratios (+4.4 to +11.8) that are decoupled from initial eHf (+0.8 to +11.1). These radiogenic eNd compositions persist throughout the southern volcanic stratigraphy and indicate involvement of a component with high time-integrated Sm/Nd that lacked correspondingly high Lu/Hf. We suggest that the source region for the southwestern Natkusiak basalts and related sills included isotopically matured oceanic crust, which was recycled through the asthenospheric mantle into a laterally heterogeneous plume. The distinct trace element signatures of the southern and northern sources became attenuated with the onset of voluminous melting (corresponding to emplacement of the Type 2 doleritic sills and sheet flow basalts) and may reflect contributions from hydrous eclogitic material emplaced into the lithospheric mantle during the ca. 1.9 Ga Wopmay Orogeny. As both the northern and southern volcanic rocks exhibit contrasting isotopic signatures throughout the preserved stratigraphy, the magma plumbing system must have limited lateral mixing and homogenisation, which allowed for the expression of distinct mantle source signatures in the high-level sills and basaltic lavas.
format Report
author Beard, Charles
Scoates, James
Weis, Dominique
Bedard, Jean
Dell'Oro, Trent
author_facet Beard, Charles
Scoates, James
Weis, Dominique
Bedard, Jean
Dell'Oro, Trent
author_sort Beard, Charles
title Geochemistry and origin of the Neoproterozoic Natkusiak Flood Basalts and related Franklin Sills, Victoria Island, Arctic Canada
title_short Geochemistry and origin of the Neoproterozoic Natkusiak Flood Basalts and related Franklin Sills, Victoria Island, Arctic Canada
title_full Geochemistry and origin of the Neoproterozoic Natkusiak Flood Basalts and related Franklin Sills, Victoria Island, Arctic Canada
title_fullStr Geochemistry and origin of the Neoproterozoic Natkusiak Flood Basalts and related Franklin Sills, Victoria Island, Arctic Canada
title_full_unstemmed Geochemistry and origin of the Neoproterozoic Natkusiak Flood Basalts and related Franklin Sills, Victoria Island, Arctic Canada
title_sort geochemistry and origin of the neoproterozoic natkusiak flood basalts and related franklin sills, victoria island, arctic canada
publisher EarthArXiv
publishDate 2018
url https://dx.doi.org/10.17605/osf.io/haryt
https://eartharxiv.org/haryt/
geographic Arctic
Canada
geographic_facet Arctic
Canada
genre Arctic
Victoria Island
victoria island
genre_facet Arctic
Victoria Island
victoria island
op_relation https://dx.doi.org/10.1093/petrology/egy004
op_rights CC-By Attribution 4.0 International
op_doi https://doi.org/10.17605/osf.io/haryt
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