64 research outputs found

    Origin, ore forming fluid evolution and timing of the LogrosƔn Sn-(W) ore deposits (Central Iberian Zone, Spain)

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    The LogrosĆ”n Snā€“(W) ore deposits in the metallogenic Snā€“W province of the European Variscan Belt consist of endo- and exogranitic greisen-type and quartzā€“cassiterite veins associated with a S-type granite. Mineral characterization, fluid inclusion study, isotope geochemistry and Arā€“Ar geochronology have been combined in order to reconstruct the conditions for Snā€“(W) mineralization. The endo- and exogranitic mineralization must have been developed in a relatively long-lived system (~Ā 308ā€“303Ā Ma), during or soon after the emplacement of the LogrosĆ”n related-granite (at ca. 308Ā Ma). The mineralizing fluids are characterized by complex aqueous and volatile (H2Oā€“N2ā€“CO2ā€“CH4ā€“NaCl) fluid inclusions. Microthermometry and Raman analyses indicate that fluid composition evolved from N2ā€“CH4 to N2-rich, followed by CO2-rich fluids, with varying amounts of H2O. The presence of N2 and CH4 suggests the interaction with fluids derived from the nearby metasedimentary host rocks. A model of host-rock interaction, assimilation, and mixing of metamorphic and magmatic fluids, resulting in change of the redox conditions, is proposed for tin deposition. Later sulfide minerals were precipitated as a result of pressure and temperature release

    The eruptive history and magmatic evolution of Aluto volcano: new insights into silicic peralkaline volcanism in the Ethiopian rift

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    The silicic peralkaline volcanoes of the East African Rift are some of the least studied volcanoes on Earth. Here we bring together new constraints from fieldwork, remote sensing, geochronology and geochemistry to present the first detailed account of the eruptive history of Aluto, a restless silicic volcano located in a densely populated section of the Main Ethiopian Rift. Prior to the growth of the Aluto volcanic complex (before 500Ā ka) the region was characterized by a significant period of fault development and mafic fissure eruptions. The earliest volcanism at Aluto built up a trachytic complex over 8Ā km in diameter. Aluto then underwent large-volume ignimbrite eruptions at 316Ā Ā±Ā 19Ā ka and 306Ā Ā±Ā 12Ā ka developing aĀ ~Ā 42Ā km2 collapse structure. After a hiatus of ~Ā 250Ā ka, a phase of post-caldera volcanism initiated at 55Ā Ā±Ā 19Ā ka and the most recent eruption of Aluto has a radiocarbon age of 0.40Ā Ā±Ā 0.05Ā cal. ka BP. During this post-caldera phase highly-evolved peralkaline rhyolite lavas, ignimbrites and pumice fall deposits have erupted from vents across the complex. Geochemical modelling is consistent with rhyolite genesis from protracted fractionation (>Ā 80%) of basalt that is compositionally similar to rift-related basalts found east of the complex. Based on the style and volume of recent eruptions we suggest that silicic eruptions occur at an average rate of 1 per 1000Ā years, and that future eruptions of Aluto will involve explosive emplacement of localised pumice cones and effusive obsidian coulees of volumes in the range 1ā€“100Ā Ć—Ā 106Ā m3

    A critical appraisal of the sensitivity of detrital zircon Uā€“Pb provenance data to constrain drainage network evolution in southeast Tibet

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    Provenance tools, particularly detrital zircon Uā€“Pb analysis, have been widely employed to test drainage network evolution in southeast Tibet and its linkage with the growth of the Tibetan Plateau. Numerous provenance studies have been conducted on the sediments in the paleo-Yangtze and paleo-Red River drainage basins. Nevertheless, it is still hotly debated as to whether a ā€œMississippiā€ (dendritic) pattern Greater paleo-Red River, originating from southeast Tibet and draining to the South China Sea, existed in the early Cenozoic, and was subsequently captured by the paleo-lower Yangtze due to uplift of southeastern Tibet. In this study, in addition to presenting new data from the Gonjo and Jianchuan basins along which the Greater paleo-Red River is proposed to have flowed, we compiled all the published detrital zircon Uā€“Pb data from the paleo-upper Yangtze and paleo-Red River drainage basins from Triassic and younger rocks. Our large database of detrital zircon Uā€“Pb analyses shows that the different terranes in the paleo-upper Yangtze and paleo-Red River drainage basins have similar zircon Uā€“Pb signatures since the Late Triassic closure of the Paleo-Tethys Ocean. Therefore, most of the sediments in the Cenozoic sedimentary basins in southeast Tibet could have been either deposited by long-distance transport in large rivers from southeast Tibet or recycled from local bedrock. Given the potential importance of sedimentary recycling that we have demonstrated, this poses challenges to the use of detrital zircon Uā€“Pb analyses to determine paleodrainage in this region. We therefore further explored the previously relatively limited use of Srā€“Nd isotopes on mudstones and detrital mica 40Ar/39Ar ages, with new analyses from the Gonjo and Jianchuan Basins, to determine if these techniques were better suited to reconstruct paleodrainage evolution. Whilst these techniques do show some promise, more analyses and strategic sampling are required to obtain a full understanding of the extent of their potential utility. Overall, our integrated provenance study indicates that the available data are not sufficiently conclusive to support or refute the Greater paleo-Red River capture model

    Intensive chemical weathering in the Arctic during the Miocene Climatic Optimum

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    The Arctic today has shallow, chemically immature, and frost-dominated weathering regimes. At Sokli, Finland (68Ā°N), a 70 m deep palaeo-weathering profile is developed in a Devonian carbonatite pipe that represents fundamentally different past weathering environments. Formation of the apatite-francolite P-ore likely began under Palaeogene warm, humid climates. Later, cryptomelane (K-Mn oxide) crusts developed within the ore that have yielded peak 40Ar/39Ar ages of 16.20 Ā± 0.13 Ma (2Ļƒ)., The crusts formed at the redox front during the Miocene Climatic Optimum (āˆ¼16.9ā€“14.7 Ma) under mean annual temperatures āˆ¼12ā€“14 Ā°C warmer than today. The presence of the cryptomelane crust at shallow depth (15 m) indicates very low erosion rates since formation, consistent with its position on a tectonically stable Archaean craton and in the cold-based ice-divide zone of successive Fennoscandian ice sheets. The Miocene Climatic Optimum triggered a pulse of intensive weathering in mid- and low latitudes; the Sokli cryptomelane ages demonstrate that intensive chemical weathering extended into the Arctic

    Timing and consequences of Bering Strait opening: new insights from 40Ar/39 1 Ar dating 2 of the Barmur Group (Tjƶrnes beds), northern Iceland

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    The Barmur Group (informally Tjƶrnes beds) sedimentary succession of northern Iceland is key to reconstructing the opening of the Bering Strait oceanic gateway because these rocks record migration of bivalve molluscs from the Pacific to the Atlantic via the Arctic. However, the timing of the migration event is poorly constrained owing to a lack of reliable absolute ages. To address this problem, we present the first Ar-Ar radiometric dates from four basaltic lavas that underlie, are intercalated with, and overlie the Barmur Group, and integrate them with existing paleomagnetic records. We show that the Barmur Group has a latest Miocene to early Pliocene age range (c. 6.0ā€“4.4 Ma; C3rā€“C3n.2n), older than all previous age models. Thus, the Barmur Group does not record the mid-Piacenzian Warm Period, contra some previous suggestions. Abundant Pacific bivalve molluscs appeared in the Barmur Group during subchrons C3n.4nā€“C3n.3r at 5.235ā€“4.896 Ma, over 1.3 million years earlier than previously suggested. Appearance of Pacific bivalves in the northern Atlantic occurred shortly after the 5.6ā€“5.4 Ma age previously inferred for first appearance of Arctic bivalves in the Pacific. Thus, our data suggest that first opening of the Bering Strait gateway by the latest Miocene (c. 5.5 Ma) was soon followed by bidirectional trans-Arctic faunal exchange, and argue against a hypothesized two-stage faunal exchange process spanning c. 2 million years. Our results also confirm that first opening of the Bering Strait gateway was not directly associated with the growth of large northern hemisphere icesheets, which occurred several million years later

    Duration of hydrothermal alteration and mineralization of the Don Manuel porphyry copper system, central Chile

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    The Don Manuel porphyry copper system, located in the Mioceneā€“Pliocene metallogenic belt of central Chile, contains spatially zoned alteration styles common to other porphyry copper deposits including extensive potassic alteration, propylitic alteration, localized sericite-chlorite alteration and argillic alteration but lacks pervasive hydrolytic alteration typical of some deposits. It is one of the youngest porphyry copper deposits in the Andes. Timing of mineralization and the hydrothermal system at Don Manuel are consistent with emplacement of the associated intrusions (ca. 4 and 3.6 Ma). Two molybdenite samples yielded consistent ages of 3.412 Ā± 0.037 and 3.425 Ā± 0.037 Ma. 40Ar/39Ar ages on hydrothermal biotites (3.57 Ā± 0.02, 3.51 Ā± 0.02, 3.41 Ā± 0.01, and 3.37 Ā± 0.01 Ma) are associated with potassic alteration. These ages are younger than the youngest intrusion by ~300 k.y. recording the cooling of the system below 350 Ā°C. Such a time gap can be explained by fluxing of hot magmatic fluids from deeper magmatic sources

    Petrogenesis of Siletzia: the worldā€™s youngest oceanic plateau

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    Siletzia is an accreted Palaeocene-Eocene Large Igneous Province, preserved in the northwest United States and southern Vancouver Island. Although previous workers have suggested that components of Siletzia were formed in tectonic settings including back arc basins, island arcs and ocean islands, more recent work has presented evidence for parts of Siletzia to have formed in response to partial melting of a mantle plume. In this paper, we integrate geochemical and geochronological data to investigate the petrogenetic evolution of the province. The major element geochemistry of the Siletzia lava flows is used to determine the compositions of the primary magmas of the province, as well as the conditions of mantle melting. These primary magmas are compositionally similar to modern Ocean Island and Mid-Ocean Ridge lavas. Geochemical modelling of these magmas indicates they predominantly evolved through fractional crystallisation of olivine, pyroxenes, plagioclase, spinel and apatite in shallow magma chambers, and experienced limited interaction with crustal components. Further modelling indicates that Siletzia magmatism was derived from anomalously hot mantle, consistent with an origin in a mantle plume. This plume has been suggested to have been the same as that responsible for magmatism within the Yellowstone Plateau. Trace element compositions of the most primitive Siletzia lavas are similar to suites associated with the Yellowstone Mantle Plume, suggesting that the two provinces were derived from compositionally similar sources. Radiogenic isotope systematics for Siletzia consistently overlap with some of the oldest suites of the Yellowstone Magmatic Province. Therefore, we suggest Siletzia and the Yellowstone Mantle Plume are part of the same, evolving mantle plume system. Our new geochronological data show the province was emplaced during the time when Eocene sea surface temperatures were their highest. The size of Siletzia makes the province a potential contributing factor to the biospheric perturbation observed in the early Eocene

    Humid phases on the southwestern Arabian Peninsula are consistent with the last two interglacials

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    Past environmental and climatic conditions within the Arabian Peninsula are key to understanding the setting for hominin dispersal across the Saharo-Arabian dryland belt. The tufa deposits within the volcanic harrats on the southwest coast of Saudi Arabia fill a significant spatial gap in the distribution of palaeoenvironmental records on the west coast of the Arabian Peninsula adjacent to the Red Sea. In the catchment of Wadi Dabsa in the Harrat Al Birk, there are widespread fossil palustrine to shallow-lacustrine tufa deposits with fluvial elements. Several phases of tufa accumulation, separated by fluvial downcutting, are observable within these powerful palaeoenvironmental proxies. Uā€“Th dating of targeted dense, banded tufa facies, yield ages that are stratigraphically consistent at the landscape scale, and indicate that tufa accumulation occurred during distinct humid phases broadly coeval with the last two warm interglacial Marine Isotope Stages (MIS 7 and MIS 5). For the first time this shows humid intervals in southwest Arabia coincident with the southern coast. There is a simlar pattern emerging further north in the Arabian Peninsula, The Sinai and Levant and further on into continental Europe. Furthermore, tufa Ī“18O ranges from āˆ’14.6 to āˆ’1.9ā€°, covering a range similar to those reported for tufa from north African oasis sites and speleothems elsewhere on the Arabian Peninsula and The Levant. The lowest Ī“18O values are derived from MIS 5e samples, a pattern in agreement with speleothems in Yemen and Oman, and consistent with an isotopic-enabled climate model simulation for this time slice. The Ī“13C and Sr isotopic compositions of dated tufa samples indicate deposition from shallow-circulating meteoric water, with no geothermal influence. This, along with the Ī“18O values, suggest a freshwater supply that was a potable water source in this landscape. The Ī“13C signatures at Wadi Dabsa are more negative than for parts of north Africa, suggesting Wadi Dabsa may have experienced comparatively higher biomass, thicker soils and wetter conditions with lower evaporative losses. This new record of tufa deposition during the middle and late Pleistocene, suggests for the first time that the west coast of Arabia experienced a similar history of humid phases over the past 250 ka as southern Arabia and the Nefud in the northern interior. These regional changes in hydroclimatic regime occur at timescales coincident with hominin dispersals
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