Thinning of the Antarctic Peninsula lithosphere through the Mesozoic: evidence from Middle Jurassic basaltic lavas

Rare basaltic volcanic rocks from the northern Antarctic Peninsula (Jason Peninsula) are established as marginally predating a silicic large igneous province, which developed along the proto-Pacific margin of Gondwana. Ar-40-Ar-39 geochronology reported here has dated the basalts in the interval, 17...

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Published in:Lithos
Main Authors: Riley, Teal R., Leat, Philip T., Kelley, Simon P., Millar, Ian L., Thirlwall, Matthew F.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: 2003
Subjects:
Online Access:https://oro.open.ac.uk/2114/
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spelling ftopenunivgb:oai:oro.open.ac.uk:2114 2024-06-23T07:46:43+00:00 Thinning of the Antarctic Peninsula lithosphere through the Mesozoic: evidence from Middle Jurassic basaltic lavas Riley, Teal R. Leat, Philip T. Kelley, Simon P. Millar, Ian L. Thirlwall, Matthew F. 2003-04 https://oro.open.ac.uk/2114/ unknown Riley, Teal R.; Leat, Philip T.; Kelley, Simon P. <https://oro.open.ac.uk/view/person/spk5.html>; Millar, Ian L. and Thirlwall, Matthew F. (2003). Thinning of the Antarctic Peninsula lithosphere through the Mesozoic: evidence from Middle Jurassic basaltic lavas. Lithos, 67(3-4) pp. 163–179. Journal Item PeerReviewed 2003 ftopenunivgb 2024-06-12T14:21:37Z Rare basaltic volcanic rocks from the northern Antarctic Peninsula (Jason Peninsula) are established as marginally predating a silicic large igneous province, which developed along the proto-Pacific margin of Gondwana. Ar-40-Ar-39 geochronology reported here has dated the basalts in the interval, 175-168 Ma, which overlaps with the dates previously obtained on the silicic volcanic rocks, 171-168 Ma. The basalts are evolved with low Mg#, Cr and Ni, indicating they have undergone significant fractional crystallisation from mantle-derived melts. Their trace elements (high Th/Yb) and isotope ratios (positive epsilonSr and low epsilonNd) indicate that they are derived from lithospheric mantle, which has been significantly modified by subduction-derived fluids and sediments. Cretaceous age (126-106 Ma) primitive mafic dykes from the Antarctic Peninsula are also interpreted as partial melts of the subduction-modified mantle, and together with the Middle Jurassic basalts are used to monitor the Antarctic Peninsula lithosphere. The shift from lithosphere-derived (Jurassic) to asthenosphere-derived (Cretaceous) partial melts in the northern Antarctic Peninsula is attributed to thinning of the lithosphere, which was a consequence of the voluminous silicic volcanism of the Middle Jurassic, coupled with regional extension. The chemistry, chronology and rarity of the basalts are consistent with the model proposed for the voluminous silicic volcanism. Article in Journal/Newspaper Antarc* Antarctic Antarctic Peninsula The Open University: Open Research Online (ORO) Antarctic The Antarctic Antarctic Peninsula Pacific Jason Peninsula ENVELOPE(-61.667,-61.667,-66.250,-66.250) Lithos 67 3-4 163 179
institution Open Polar
collection The Open University: Open Research Online (ORO)
op_collection_id ftopenunivgb
language unknown
description Rare basaltic volcanic rocks from the northern Antarctic Peninsula (Jason Peninsula) are established as marginally predating a silicic large igneous province, which developed along the proto-Pacific margin of Gondwana. Ar-40-Ar-39 geochronology reported here has dated the basalts in the interval, 175-168 Ma, which overlaps with the dates previously obtained on the silicic volcanic rocks, 171-168 Ma. The basalts are evolved with low Mg#, Cr and Ni, indicating they have undergone significant fractional crystallisation from mantle-derived melts. Their trace elements (high Th/Yb) and isotope ratios (positive epsilonSr and low epsilonNd) indicate that they are derived from lithospheric mantle, which has been significantly modified by subduction-derived fluids and sediments. Cretaceous age (126-106 Ma) primitive mafic dykes from the Antarctic Peninsula are also interpreted as partial melts of the subduction-modified mantle, and together with the Middle Jurassic basalts are used to monitor the Antarctic Peninsula lithosphere. The shift from lithosphere-derived (Jurassic) to asthenosphere-derived (Cretaceous) partial melts in the northern Antarctic Peninsula is attributed to thinning of the lithosphere, which was a consequence of the voluminous silicic volcanism of the Middle Jurassic, coupled with regional extension. The chemistry, chronology and rarity of the basalts are consistent with the model proposed for the voluminous silicic volcanism.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Riley, Teal R.
Leat, Philip T.
Kelley, Simon P.
Millar, Ian L.
Thirlwall, Matthew F.
spellingShingle Riley, Teal R.
Leat, Philip T.
Kelley, Simon P.
Millar, Ian L.
Thirlwall, Matthew F.
Thinning of the Antarctic Peninsula lithosphere through the Mesozoic: evidence from Middle Jurassic basaltic lavas
author_facet Riley, Teal R.
Leat, Philip T.
Kelley, Simon P.
Millar, Ian L.
Thirlwall, Matthew F.
author_sort Riley, Teal R.
title Thinning of the Antarctic Peninsula lithosphere through the Mesozoic: evidence from Middle Jurassic basaltic lavas
title_short Thinning of the Antarctic Peninsula lithosphere through the Mesozoic: evidence from Middle Jurassic basaltic lavas
title_full Thinning of the Antarctic Peninsula lithosphere through the Mesozoic: evidence from Middle Jurassic basaltic lavas
title_fullStr Thinning of the Antarctic Peninsula lithosphere through the Mesozoic: evidence from Middle Jurassic basaltic lavas
title_full_unstemmed Thinning of the Antarctic Peninsula lithosphere through the Mesozoic: evidence from Middle Jurassic basaltic lavas
title_sort thinning of the antarctic peninsula lithosphere through the mesozoic: evidence from middle jurassic basaltic lavas
publishDate 2003
url https://oro.open.ac.uk/2114/
long_lat ENVELOPE(-61.667,-61.667,-66.250,-66.250)
geographic Antarctic
The Antarctic
Antarctic Peninsula
Pacific
Jason Peninsula
geographic_facet Antarctic
The Antarctic
Antarctic Peninsula
Pacific
Jason Peninsula
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctic Peninsula
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctic Peninsula
op_relation Riley, Teal R.; Leat, Philip T.; Kelley, Simon P. <https://oro.open.ac.uk/view/person/spk5.html>; Millar, Ian L. and Thirlwall, Matthew F. (2003). Thinning of the Antarctic Peninsula lithosphere through the Mesozoic: evidence from Middle Jurassic basaltic lavas. Lithos, 67(3-4) pp. 163–179.
container_title Lithos
container_volume 67
container_issue 3-4
container_start_page 163
op_container_end_page 179
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