scholarly journals Nature of Cretaceous dolerite dikes with two distinct trends in the Damodar Valley, eastern India: Constraints on their linkage to mantle plumes and large igneous provinces from 40Ar/39Ar geochronology and geochemistry

Lithosphere ◽  
2019 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
pp. 40-52 ◽  
Author(s):  
Rajesh K. Srivastava ◽  
Fei Wang ◽  
Wenbei Shi ◽  
Anup K. Sinha ◽  
Kenneth L. Buchan

Abstract Two distinct sets of Cretaceous dolerite dikes intrude the Chhotanagpur gneissic complex of eastern India, mostly within the Damodar Valley Gondwanan sedimentary basins. One dike set trends NNE to ENE, whereas the other set, which includes the prominent Salma dike, trends NW to NNW. One dike from each set in the Raniganj Basin was dated using the 40Ar/39Ar method in order to resolve a controversy concerning the emplacement age of the Salma dike. The NE-trending dike yielded a plateau age of 70.5 ± 0.9 Ma, whereas the NNW-trending Salma dike is much older, with a plateau age of 116.0 ± 1.4 Ma. These results demonstrate that the Salma dike was emplaced at ca. 116 Ma and not at ca. 65 Ma, as suggested in an earlier study. Geochemical characteristics of the two dikes are also distinct and indicate that they belong to previously identified high-Ti and low-Ti dolerite groups, respectively. The observed geochemical characteristics of both dike sets are comparable with the geochemistry of basalts of the Kerguelen Plateau, Bunbury Island, and Rajmahal Group I and suggest a connection to mantle plumes. The new age data presented herein indicate that these two magmatic episodes in the eastern Indian Shield were related to the ca. 120–100 Ma Kerguelen mantle plume and its associated Greater Kerguelen large igneous province and the ca. 70–65 Ma Réunion plume and its associated Deccan large igneous province, respectively.

2021 ◽  
pp. M55-2018-39 ◽  
Author(s):  
David H. Elliot ◽  
Thomas. H. Fleming

AbstractThe Lower Jurassic Ferrar Large Igneous Province consists predominantly of intrusive rocks, which crop out over a distance of 3500 km. In comparison, extrusive rocks are more restricted geographically. Geochemically, the province is divided into the Mount Fazio Chemical Type, forming more than 99% of the exposed province, and the Scarab Peak Chemical Type, which in the Ross Sea sector is restricted to the uppermost lava. The former exhibits a range of compositions (SiO2 = 52–59%; MgO = 9.2–2.6%; Zr = 60–175 ppm; Sri = 0.7081–0.7138; εNd = −6.0 to −3.8), whereas the latter has a restricted composition (SiO2 = c. 58%; MgO = c. 2.3%; Zr = c. 230 ppm; Sri = 0.7090–0.7097; εNd = −4.4 to −4.1). Both chemical types are characterized by enriched initial isotope compositions of neodymium and strontium, low abundances of high field strength elements, and crust-like trace element patterns. The most basic rocks, olivine-bearing dolerites, indicate that these geochemical characteristics were inherited from a mantle source modified by subduction processes, possibly the incorporation of sediment. In one model, magmas were derived from a linear source having multiple sites of generation each of which evolved to yield, in sum, the province-wide coherent geochemistry. The preferred interpretation is that the remarkably coherent geochemistry and short duration of emplacement demonstrate derivation from a single source inferred to have been located in the proto-Weddell Sea region. The spatial variation in geochemical characteristics of the lavas suggests distinct magma batches erupted at the surface, whereas no clear geographical pattern is evident for intrusive rocks.


2009 ◽  
Vol 146 (3) ◽  
pp. 305-308 ◽  
Author(s):  
DOUGAL A. JERRAM ◽  
KATHRYN M. GOODENOUGH ◽  
VALENTIN R. TROLL

The study of volcanic rocks and igneous centres has long been a classic part of geological research. Despite the lack of active volcanism, the British Isles have been a key centre for the study of igneous rocks ever since ancient lava flows and excavated igneous centres were recognized there in the 18th century (Hutton, 1788). This led to some of the earliest detailed studies of petrology. The starting point for many of these studies was the British Palaeogene Igneous Province (BPIP; formerly known as the ‘British Tertiary’ (Judd, 1889), and still recognized by this name by many geologists around the globe). This collection of lavas, volcanic centres and sill/dyke swarms covers much of the west of Scotland and the Antrim plateau of Northern Ireland, and together with similar rocks in the Faroe Islands, Iceland and Greenland forms a world-class Large Igneous Province. This North Atlantic Igneous Province (NAIP) began to form through continental rifting above a mantle plume at c. 60 Ma, and subsequently evolved as North America separated from Europe, creating the North Atlantic Ocean.


Author(s):  
Bryan C. Storey ◽  
Alan P. M. Vaughan ◽  
Teal R. Riley

ABSTRACTEarth history is punctuated by events during which large volumes of predominantly mafic magmas were generated and emplaced by processes that are generally accepted as being, unrelated to ‘normal’ sea-floor spreading and subduction processes. These events form large igneous provinces (LIPs) which are best preserved in the Mesozoic and Cenozoic where they occur as continental and ocean basin flood basalts, giant radiating dyke swarms, volcanic rifted margins, oceanic plateaus, submarine ridges, and seamount chains. The Mesozoic history of Antarctica is no exception in that a number of different igneous provinces were emplaced during the initial break-up and continued disintegration of Gondwana, leading to the isolation of Antarctica in a polar position. The link between the emplacement of the igneous rocks and continental break-up processes remains controversial. The environmental impact of large igneous province formation on the Earth System is equally debated. Large igneous province eruptions are coeval with, and may drive environmental and climatic effects including global warming, oceanic anoxia and/or increased oceanic fertilisation, calcification crises, mass extinction and release of gas hydrates.This review explores the links between the emplacement of large igneous provinces in Antarctica, the isolation of Antarctica from other Gondwana continents, and possibly related environmental and climatic changes during the Mesozoic and Cenozoic.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Frances Deegan ◽  
Jean Bédard ◽  
Valentin Troll ◽  
Keith Dewing ◽  
Harri Geiger ◽  
...  

<p><span>Large Igneous Province (LIP) activity is hypothesized to impact global volatile cycles causing climate changes and environmental crises deleterious to the biosphere. Recent work suggests that the potential of LIPs to impact climate is magnified where they intrude organic-rich (i.e. shale-bearing) sedimentary basins. However, the chemical and degassing dynamics of magma-shale interaction are not well understood. Here we present the first experimental simulations of disequilibrium interaction between LIP magma and carbonaceous shale during upper crustal sill intrusions in the Canadian High Arctic LIP (HALIP), the latter of which were co-eval with oceanic anoxic event 1a. Experiments show that magma-shale interaction results in intense syn-magmatic degassing and simultaneous precipitation of sulfide droplets at the ablation interface. Magma-shale interaction on a basin-scale can thus generate substantial amounts of climate-active H-C-S volatiles, while the presence of strongly reducing volatiles may also increase the likelihood of magma to segregate a sulfide melt. These findings have fundamental consequences for our understanding of both large-scale Earth outgassing and metal prospectivity in sediment-hosted LIPs.</span></p>


2017 ◽  
Vol 1 (T2) ◽  
pp. 114-123
Author(s):  
Minh Pham ◽  
Hieu Trung Pham ◽  
Hoang Kim Nguyen

Alkaline granites of the Muong Hum are distributed mainly in the NW Phan Si Pan zone. The granite closely has striped or clear gneissoid structures, coinciding with general NW-SE trends. It consists mainly of plagioclase (~20–30 %), alkaline feldspar (~30–50 %), quartz (~20–25 %), biotite (~1–5 %), aegirine (~1–3 %), and riebeckite (~1–2 %). It has 10,000×Ga/Al ratios of 4.70–4.93, A/CNK values of 0.87–0.90, and negative Eu-anomalies as well as apparent depletion of Ba, Sr, Ti, and P. The mineral assemblages and chemical characteristics show that it is typical of A-type granites. Compared with other adjacent Late Permian to Early Triassic A-type granitic plutons, geochemical characteristics of the Muong Hum granite are similar to the Phu Sa Phìn, Phan Si Pan, Ye Yen Sun, and Nam Xe-Tam Duong granites in NW Vietnam as well as the Taihe, and Panzhihua granites in SW China. Thus, the Phan Si Pan zone must have been a displaced portion of the Emeishan large igneous province. This might be a direct result of the left-lateral Cenozoic Red River shear zone.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Urs Schaltegger ◽  
Philipp Widmann ◽  
Nicolas D. Greber ◽  
Luis Lena ◽  
Sean P. Gaynor ◽  
...  

<p>The connection between volcanic activity of large igneous provinces and the respective feedback from environment and biosphere contributing to the carbon cycle has been investigated at the present temporal resolution of high-precision U/Pb dating. Uncertainties of 0.05 % on the <sup>206</sup>Pb/<sup>238</sup>U age from zircon dating allow a resolution of 30-50 ka pulses of magmatic activity; simultaneously, the duration of carbon isotope excursions (CIE) can be determined, the geological boundaries dated, or global sedimentary gaps can be quantified at the same level of precision. This contribution demonstrates with two case studies that we can refine the contemporaneity and start to reliably infer causality of consecutive events at the 10<sup>4</sup> year level.</p><p>Until the Anisian the aftermath of the Permo-Triassic Boundary Mass extinction (PTBME; ~251.94 Ma, Baresel et al., 2017) is characterized by profound fluctuations of the global carbon cycle with amplitudes of up to 8 ‰ in d<sup>13</sup>C<sub>carb</sub> values. These represent large variations in the global climate and biological crises, in particular during the end-Smithian extinction event (~249.1 Ma). A precise chronology from the southern Nanpanjiang basin (China) allows for a quantification of these fluctuations of Earth climate. Following the volcanic pulse causing the PTBME, several discontinuous episodes of volcanism of the Siberian Large Igneous Province (S-LIP) were generally assumed to have caused the subsequent Early Triassic carbon cycle fluctuations. This is, however, in disagreement with the geochronological database of precise zircon U/Pb dates that put an end to the volcanic activity at 250.6 Ma (Burgess & Bowring, 2015; Augland et al., 2019). Therefore, recurrent S-LIP volcanism is an unlikely explanation for the Early Triassic unstable carbon cycle.</p><p>The initial intrusive pulse of the Karoo Large Igneous Province (K-LIP) formed the sill/dyke complex of the Karoo basin, South Africa. New, precise U/Pb geochronology confirms its very short duration at around 183.2-182.8 Ma (Burgess et al., 2015; Corfu et al., 2016), as well as its synchronicity with the lower Toarcian oceanic anoxic event (T-OAE), and a carbon cycle disturbance of presumable global importance. Repeated excursions in d<sup>13</sup>C<sub>org</sub> of up to 3 ‰ in the late Pliensbachian (~185.5 Ma) as well as at the Pliensbachian-Toarcian boundary (~183.5 Ma) are therefore at least partly older than any known magmatic activity of the K-LIP (Lena et al., 2019). We therefore, again, must invoke non-volcanic drivers in order to explain the instability of the carbon cycle.</p><p>These two case histories demonstrate that in order to invoke causality and global importance to carbon cycle instability, as well as for the testing of its correlation with volcanic episodes, we need to rely on geochronology of both sedimentary and volcanic records at the 10<sup>4</sup> years level of precision.</p><p>References: Augland et al. (2019) Scientific Reports, 9:18723 ; Baresel et al. (2017) Solid Earth, 8, 361–378, 2017; Burgess & Bowring (2015) Science Advances, 1(7), e1500470–e1500470; Burgess et al. (2015) Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 415(C), 90–99; Corfu, F. et al. (2016) Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 434(C), 349–352; Lena et al. (2019) Scientific Reports, 9:18430.</p>


2019 ◽  
Vol 10 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Stephen M. Jones ◽  
Murray Hoggett ◽  
Sarah E. Greene ◽  
Tom Dunkley Jones

AbstractLarge Igneous Provinces (LIPs) are associated with the largest climate perturbations in Earth’s history. The North Atlantic Igneous Province (NAIP) and Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum (PETM) constitute an exemplar of this association. As yet we have no means to reconstruct the pacing of LIP greenhouse gas emissions for comparison with climate records at millennial resolution. Here, we calculate carbon-based greenhouse gas fluxes associated with the NAIP at sub-millennial resolution by linking measurements of the mantle convection process that generated NAIP magma with observations of the individual geological structures that controlled gas emissions in a Monte Carlo framework. These simulations predict peak emissions flux of 0.2–0.5 PgC yr–1 and show that the NAIP could have initiated PETM climate change. This is the first predictive model of carbon emissions flux from any proposed PETM carbon source that is directly constrained by observations of the geological structures that controlled the emissions.


Episodes ◽  
2007 ◽  
Vol 30 (1) ◽  
pp. 32-42 ◽  
Author(s):  
Yi-Gang Xu ◽  
Bin He ◽  
Xiaolong Huang ◽  
Zhenyu Luo ◽  
Sun-Lin Chung ◽  
...  

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