Petrography and geochemistry of oceanic crust: provenance of sedimentary detritus, Macquarie Island

Macquarie Island, located 1500 km southeast of Australia, is a sub-aerial exposure of Miocene oceanic crust/upper mantle situated within the oceanic basin in which it formed. The seafloor spreading related ‘Finch – Langdon fault’ juxtaposes upper mantle serpentinised peridotites, gabbro and sheeted...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Melissa Jean Murphy
Format: Thesis
Language:unknown
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.25949/19440185.v1
https://figshare.com/articles/thesis/Petrography_and_geochemistry_of_oceanic_crust_provenance_of_sedimentary_detritus_Macquarie_Island/19440185
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Summary:Macquarie Island, located 1500 km southeast of Australia, is a sub-aerial exposure of Miocene oceanic crust/upper mantle situated within the oceanic basin in which it formed. The seafloor spreading related ‘Finch – Langdon fault’ juxtaposes upper mantle serpentinised peridotites, gabbro and sheeted dolerite dykes in the northern quarter of the island with volcanic rocks (pillow basalts, tabular basalts, hyaloclastites and minor sedimentary rocks) that form the southern part of the island. Interbedded within the extensive volcanic sequences are volcaniclastic sedimentary units containing gabbro and dolerite clasts, indicative that lower oceanic crust was exposed near the mid-ocean ridge during active volcanism. Through a combination of petrography, major and trace-element clinopyroxene and zircon geochemistry, and U-Pb geochronology, this thesis investigates the provenance of the sedimentary units produced at an active mid-ocean ridge. The high abundance of hydrothermal monomineralic clasts including chlorite, epidote, prehnite, quartz, carbonates and zeolites, and clasts of fault rock within the sedimentary rocks is consistent with a fault-scarp derived provenance. The unusually large volume of sedimentary rocks exposed on Macquarie Island suggests a large plate boundary scale transform fault is likely in order to produce the large volume of sediment. The long offset transform that links the Miocene ‘A2/P2 – A4/P4’ seafloor spreading corridor to the Australia-Antarctic-Pacific triple junction is the most proximal and therefore most likely source. Detrital clinopyroxene major and trace-element geochemistry shows little overlap with clinopyroxene grains within the interbedded volcanic sequences, excluding the proximal volcanism as a likely source for the sediment. A lack of peridotite signature in clinopyroxene clasts suggests that it is likely that wasting of the nearby exposed or any other upper mantle provided very little (if any) input to the sediment. Overlapping clinopyroxene geochemical affinities between ...