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Jessica M. Bartlett

Bio: Jessica M. Bartlett is an academic researcher from Open University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Metamorphism & Zircon. The author has an hindex of 8, co-authored 11 publications receiving 884 citations.
Topics: Metamorphism, Zircon, Craton, Gneiss, Biotite

Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, high precision TIMS uranium, thorium, strontium, neodymium, and lead isotopes, along with complete major and trace element data, have been obtained on an extensive sample set comprising fifty-eight lavas along the arc as well as nineteen samples of the subducting sediments at DSDP site 204 just to the east of the Tonga-Kermadec trench.

385 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: For example, in this paper, the authors obtained the first estimates of the Os isotope composition of Jurassic seawater from three suites of immature, organic-rich mudrocks from Jurassic coastal outcrops in England.

231 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The technique of single zircon dating from the thermal evaporation of 207Pb/206Pb (Kober 1986, 1987) provides a means of dating successive periods of growth and nucleation of zircons in polymetamorphic assemblages.
Abstract: The technique of single zircon dating from the thermal evaporation of 207Pb/206Pb (Kober 1986, 1987) provides a means of dating successive periods of growth and nucleation of zircons in polymetamorphic assemblages. In contrast Nd model ages may provide a measure of the period of crustal residency for the sample or its protolith. These two techniques have been combined to elucidate the tectonic history of the Proterozoic mobile belt of southern India, exposed south of the Palghat-Cauvery Shear Zone that marks the southern boundary of the Archaean craton of Karnataka. The two main tectonic units of this mobile belt comprise the Madurai and Trivandrum Blocks, both of which are characterised by massive charnockite uplands and low-lying polymetamorphic metasedimentary belts that have undergone a complex tectonic history throughout the Proterozoic. Evidence for early Palaeoproterozoic magmatism is restricted to the Madurai Block where single zircon evaporation ages from a metagranite (2436 ± 4 Ma) are similar to model Nd ages from a range of lithologies suggesting crustal growth at that time. The Trivandrum Block, to the south of the Achankovil shear zone, is comprised of the Kerala Khondalite Belt, the Nagercoil charnockites and the Achankovil metasediments. Single zircon evaporation ages, together with conventional zircon and garnet chronometry, suggest that all three units underwent upper-amphibolite facies metamorphism at ∼1800 Ma, an event unrecorded in the metagranite from the Madurai Block. This implies that the Madurai and Trivandrum blocks represent distinct terrains throughout the Palaeoproterozoic. Model Nd ages from the Achankovil metasediments are much younger (1500–1200 Ma) than those from the adjacent Kerala Khondalite Belt and Madurai Blocks (3000–2100 Ma), but there is no evidence for zircon growth in these metasediments during the Mesoproterozoic. Hence the comparatively young model Nd ages of the metasediments are indicative of a mixed provenance rather than a discrete period of crustal growth. Zircon overgrowths from the Madurai Block (547 ± 17 Ma) and Achankovil metasediments (530 ± 21 Ma) suggest that all tectonic units of the Proterozoic mobile belt of South India shared the same metamorphic history from the early Palaeozoic. This event has been recognised in the basement lithologies of Sri Lanka and East Antarctica, confirming that the constituent terrains of East Gondwana had assembled by this time.

181 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The oldest cratonic areas have been identified in South India (north of the Palghat-Cauvery shear zone) and East Antarctica (the Napier Complex) from isotopic studies of the Mozambique Belt of East Africa, the Vijayan Complex of Sri Lanka and the Yamato-Belgica Complex/Sor Rondane Mountains of East Antarctica as discussed by the authors.

48 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Two populations of ArAr ages in biotite inclusions occluded by garnets from an Indian polymetamorphic gneiss have been measured using UV laser ablation as discussed by the authors.

28 citations


Cited by
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A supercontinent, here named Columbia, may have contained nearly all of the earth's continental blocks at some time between 1.9 Ga and 1.5 Ga.

1,192 citations

Book ChapterDOI
TL;DR: In this article, the authors provide a comprehensive picture of the composition of volcanic rocks from subduction-related magmatic arcs, and provide evidence in favor of the existence of andesitic, as well as basaltic primary magmas in arcs.
Abstract: This chapter has four main aims. Provide a comprehensive picture of the composition of volcanic rocks from subduction-related magmatic arcs. Review evidence in favor of the existence of andesitic, as well as basaltic primary magmas in arcs. Present new data on the composition of arc lower crust, based mainly on our work on the Talkeetna arc section in southcentral Alaska. Summarize evidence from arc lower crustal sections that a substantial proportion of the dense, lower crustal pyroxenites and garnet granulites produced by crystal fractionation are missing.

966 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Terry Plank1
TL;DR: In this article, the authors explored the question of whether these features are created by subduction or are recycled from subducting sediment using Th/La, which is low in oceanic basalts ( 0·25) and varies in arc basalts and marine sediments (0·09−0·34).
Abstract: Arc magmas and the continental crust share many chemical features, but a major question remains as to whether these features are created by subduction or are recycled from subducting sediment. This question is explored here using Th/La, which is low in oceanic basalts ( 0·25) and varies in arc basalts and marine sediments (0·09–0·34). Volcanic arcs form linear mixing arrays between mantle and sediment in plots of Th/La vs Sm/La. The mantle end-member for different arcs varies between highly depleted and enriched compositions. The sedimentary end-member is typically the same as local trench sediment. Thus, arc magmas inherit their Th/La from subducting sediment and high Th/La is not newly created during subduction (or by intraplate, adakite or Archaean magmatism). Instead, there is a large fractionation in Th/La within the continental crust, caused by the preferential partitioning of La over Th in mafic and accessory minerals. These observations suggest a mechanism of ‘fractionation & foundering’, whereby continents differentiate into a granitic upper crust and restite-cumulate lower crust, which periodically founders into the mantle. The bulk continental crust can reach its current elevated Th/La if arc crust differentiates and loses 25–60% of its mafic residues to foundering.

911 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the results of a preliminary investigation of seven natural zircons, conducted in order to test their suitability in this regard, are presented, and it is shown that Temora-2 and Mud Tank are most likely to provide robust reference materials for Hf isotope determinations both at the present time and into the future.
Abstract: There is a growing need for new zircon reference materials for in situ Hf-isotope analysis by laser ablation-multicollector inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry (LA-MC-ICP-MS). In this contribution we document the results of a preliminary investigation of seven natural zircons, conducted in order to test their suitability in this regard. Solution MC-ICP-MS data on separated Lu and Hf fractions provided reference compositional data while the results of ca. 750 in situ LA-MC-ICP-MS analyses allowed assessment of potential micrometre-scale heterogeneity. On the basis of these analyses and additional relevant considerations such as availability, size and (Lu)Yb/Hf ratio, we suggest that, of the currently available zircons, Temora-2 and Mud Tank are most likely to provide robust reference materials for Hf isotope determinations both at the present time and into the future. The former has the advantage of also being well-characterised for U-Th-Pb systematics and suitable for in situ age determination, while the latter is the most readily available and is of very large grain size. Additional materials such as BR266, and 91500, although limited in supply, show more consistent Lu/Hf ratios and are thus of use in monitoring elemental fractionation during ICP-MS analysis.

880 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors integrated Neoproterozoic palaeomagnetic solutions from the various blocks that made up eastern Gondwana, with the large amount of recent geological data available from the orogenic belts that formed as eastern gondwana amalgamated.

810 citations