The Tiger Gabbro from northern Victoria Land, Antarctica: the roots of an island arc within the early Palaeozoic margin of Gondwana

The Tiger Gabbro layered intrusion is one of the few mafic intrusive bodies found along the ancient Antarctic Gondwana margin. Major and trace element data and Sr–Nd isotope compositions for gabbronorites indicate an island arc signature for the Tiger Gabbro parental magma. This is the first evidenc...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Laura Bracciali, Gianfranco Di Vincenzo, Sergio Rocchi, Claudio Ghezzo
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.3454655.v1
https://figshare.com/articles/The_Tiger_Gabbro_from_northern_Victoria_Land_Antarctica_the_roots_of_an_island_arc_within_the_early_Palaeozoic_margin_of___Gondwana/3454655
id ftgeosoclonfig:oai:figshare.com:article/3454655
record_format openpolar
spelling ftgeosoclonfig:oai:figshare.com:article/3454655 2023-05-15T13:33:00+02:00 The Tiger Gabbro from northern Victoria Land, Antarctica: the roots of an island arc within the early Palaeozoic margin of Gondwana Laura Bracciali Gianfranco Di Vincenzo Sergio Rocchi Claudio Ghezzo 2016-06-21T12:16:07Z https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.3454655.v1 https://figshare.com/articles/The_Tiger_Gabbro_from_northern_Victoria_Land_Antarctica_the_roots_of_an_island_arc_within_the_early_Palaeozoic_margin_of___Gondwana/3454655 unknown doi:10.6084/m9.figshare.3454655.v1 https://figshare.com/articles/The_Tiger_Gabbro_from_northern_Victoria_Land_Antarctica_the_roots_of_an_island_arc_within_the_early_Palaeozoic_margin_of___Gondwana/3454655 CC BY 4.0 CC-BY Geology Robertson Bay microplate Antarctic Gondwana margin Palaeozoic Antarctic Gondwana margin Middle Cambrian Bowers arc island arc signature trace element data Victoria Land island arc Tiger Gabbro Dataset 2016 ftgeosoclonfig https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.3454655.v1 2020-02-21T07:23:21Z The Tiger Gabbro layered intrusion is one of the few mafic intrusive bodies found along the ancient Antarctic Gondwana margin. Major and trace element data and Sr–Nd isotope compositions for gabbronorites indicate an island arc signature for the Tiger Gabbro parental magma. This is the first evidence for an island arc from plutonic rocks in northern Victoria Land. The interpretation of the Tiger Gabbro as the roots of an Early Cambrian island arc (535 ± 21 Ma, Sm–Nd age), integrated with geochemical and geochronological data from the literature, matches the occurrence of the Glasgow volcanic rocks in the southern Bowers terrane, which possibly represents its effusive counterpart. A scenario for the early Palaeozoic Antarctic Gondwana margin is hence proposed in which the Tiger volcanic arc developed on the Robertson Bay microplate in response to subduction of the palaeo-Pacific plate. The Tiger arc igneous activity was coeval to the Wilson continental arc (represented by the Granite Harbour intrusive rocks), with the two subduction zones merging southwards into one. The migration of the Wilson arc towards the forearc region in turn generated the Middle Cambrian Bowers arc. Dataset Antarc* Antarctic Antarctica Victoria Land Geological Society of London: Figshare Antarctic Bowers ENVELOPE(164.083,164.083,-85.000,-85.000) Granite Harbour ENVELOPE(162.733,162.733,-76.883,-76.883) Pacific Robertson Bay ENVELOPE(170.000,170.000,-71.417,-71.417) Victoria Land
institution Open Polar
collection Geological Society of London: Figshare
op_collection_id ftgeosoclonfig
language unknown
topic Geology
Robertson Bay microplate
Antarctic Gondwana margin
Palaeozoic Antarctic Gondwana margin
Middle Cambrian Bowers arc
island arc signature
trace element data
Victoria Land
island arc
Tiger Gabbro
spellingShingle Geology
Robertson Bay microplate
Antarctic Gondwana margin
Palaeozoic Antarctic Gondwana margin
Middle Cambrian Bowers arc
island arc signature
trace element data
Victoria Land
island arc
Tiger Gabbro
Laura Bracciali
Gianfranco Di Vincenzo
Sergio Rocchi
Claudio Ghezzo
The Tiger Gabbro from northern Victoria Land, Antarctica: the roots of an island arc within the early Palaeozoic margin of Gondwana
topic_facet Geology
Robertson Bay microplate
Antarctic Gondwana margin
Palaeozoic Antarctic Gondwana margin
Middle Cambrian Bowers arc
island arc signature
trace element data
Victoria Land
island arc
Tiger Gabbro
description The Tiger Gabbro layered intrusion is one of the few mafic intrusive bodies found along the ancient Antarctic Gondwana margin. Major and trace element data and Sr–Nd isotope compositions for gabbronorites indicate an island arc signature for the Tiger Gabbro parental magma. This is the first evidence for an island arc from plutonic rocks in northern Victoria Land. The interpretation of the Tiger Gabbro as the roots of an Early Cambrian island arc (535 ± 21 Ma, Sm–Nd age), integrated with geochemical and geochronological data from the literature, matches the occurrence of the Glasgow volcanic rocks in the southern Bowers terrane, which possibly represents its effusive counterpart. A scenario for the early Palaeozoic Antarctic Gondwana margin is hence proposed in which the Tiger volcanic arc developed on the Robertson Bay microplate in response to subduction of the palaeo-Pacific plate. The Tiger arc igneous activity was coeval to the Wilson continental arc (represented by the Granite Harbour intrusive rocks), with the two subduction zones merging southwards into one. The migration of the Wilson arc towards the forearc region in turn generated the Middle Cambrian Bowers arc.
format Dataset
author Laura Bracciali
Gianfranco Di Vincenzo
Sergio Rocchi
Claudio Ghezzo
author_facet Laura Bracciali
Gianfranco Di Vincenzo
Sergio Rocchi
Claudio Ghezzo
author_sort Laura Bracciali
title The Tiger Gabbro from northern Victoria Land, Antarctica: the roots of an island arc within the early Palaeozoic margin of Gondwana
title_short The Tiger Gabbro from northern Victoria Land, Antarctica: the roots of an island arc within the early Palaeozoic margin of Gondwana
title_full The Tiger Gabbro from northern Victoria Land, Antarctica: the roots of an island arc within the early Palaeozoic margin of Gondwana
title_fullStr The Tiger Gabbro from northern Victoria Land, Antarctica: the roots of an island arc within the early Palaeozoic margin of Gondwana
title_full_unstemmed The Tiger Gabbro from northern Victoria Land, Antarctica: the roots of an island arc within the early Palaeozoic margin of Gondwana
title_sort tiger gabbro from northern victoria land, antarctica: the roots of an island arc within the early palaeozoic margin of gondwana
publishDate 2016
url https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.3454655.v1
https://figshare.com/articles/The_Tiger_Gabbro_from_northern_Victoria_Land_Antarctica_the_roots_of_an_island_arc_within_the_early_Palaeozoic_margin_of___Gondwana/3454655
long_lat ENVELOPE(164.083,164.083,-85.000,-85.000)
ENVELOPE(162.733,162.733,-76.883,-76.883)
ENVELOPE(170.000,170.000,-71.417,-71.417)
geographic Antarctic
Bowers
Granite Harbour
Pacific
Robertson Bay
Victoria Land
geographic_facet Antarctic
Bowers
Granite Harbour
Pacific
Robertson Bay
Victoria Land
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
Victoria Land
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
Victoria Land
op_relation doi:10.6084/m9.figshare.3454655.v1
https://figshare.com/articles/The_Tiger_Gabbro_from_northern_Victoria_Land_Antarctica_the_roots_of_an_island_arc_within_the_early_Palaeozoic_margin_of___Gondwana/3454655
op_rights CC BY 4.0
op_rightsnorm CC-BY
op_doi https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.3454655.v1
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