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A geochemical study of magmatism associated with the initial stages of back-arc spreading

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TLDR
Deception and Bridgeman lavas have been studied in order to provide information on the nature of magmatism associated with the initial stages of back-arc spreading as mentioned in this paper.
Abstract
Bransfield Strait is a narrow basin separating the South Shetland Islands from the Antarctic Peninsula and is attributed to recent back-arc extension behind the South Shetland volcanic arc. The volcanic islands of Deception and Bridgeman are situated close to the axis of spreading, whereas Penguin Island lies slightly to the north of this axis. The mineralogy, petrology and geochemistry of the lavas of the three volcanoes have been studied in order to provide information on the nature of magmatism associated with the initial stages of back-arc spreading. Deception Island lavas range from olivine basalt to dacite, and all are highly sodic, with high Na/K, K/Rb, Ba/Rb and Zr/Nb ratios and with CeN/YbN = 2. Incompatible elements increase systematically between basalt and rhyodacite, while Sr decreases, suggesting that fractional crystallisation is the dominant process relating lava compositions. The rhyodacites have high concentrations of Zr, Y and the REE and negative Eu anomalies and are compositionally similar to oceanic plagiogranite. Bridgeman Island lavas are mostly basaltic andesites, but the levels of many incompatible elements, including REE, are significantly lower than those of Deception lavas, although CeN/YbN ratios and 87Sr/86Sr ratios (0.7035) are the same. Penguin Island lavas are magnesian, mildly alkaline olivine basalts with a small range of composition that can be accommodated by fractional crystallisation of olivine, clinopyroxene and/or chromite. Penguin lavas have higher 87Sr/86Sr (0.7039) and CeN/ YbN (4) ratios than Deception and Bridgeman lavas. The Rb/Sr ratios of Deception and Penguin basalts (ca. 0.01) are much too low to account for their present 87Sr/86Sr ratios. Modelling suggests that the source regions of the lavas of the three volcanoes share many geochemical features, but there are also some significant differences, which probably reflects the complex nature of the mantle under an active island arc combined with complex melting relationships attending the initial stages of back-arc spreading. Favoured models suggest that Bridgeman lavas represent 10–20% melting and the more primitive Deception lavas 5–10% melting of spinel-peridotite, whereas Penguin lavas represent less then 5% melting of a garnet-peridotite source. The mantle source for Bridgeman lavas seems to have undergone short-term enrichment in K, Rb and Ba, possibly resulting from dewatering of the subducted slab. Hydrous melting conditions may also account for the more siliceous, high-alumina nature and low trace element contents of Bridgeman lavas.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Chemical characteristics of island-arc basalts: Implications for mantle sources

TL;DR: In this article, the major-element, trace-element and isotopic compositions of approximately 1200 basalts (Mg +Fe 2+ ) > 65 ] IAB and MORB are similar, but differ significantly from IPB.
Journal ArticleDOI

Rutile saturation in magmas: implications for TiNbTa depletion in island-arc basalts

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated the properties of rutile-saturated melts ranging from basalt to rhyodacite and found that dissolved TiO 2 is positively correlated with T and not strongly dependent on P total.
Journal ArticleDOI

Geochemical characteristics of basaltic volcanism within back-arc basins

TL;DR: In this paper, back-arc basins are characterized by a range of compositions from N-type MORB to calc-alkaline basalt, which can be satisfactorily explained by chemical variations in the composition of the mantle material supplying the backarc basin crust.
Journal ArticleDOI

Transverse geochemical variations across the Antarctic Peninsula: Implications for the genesis of calc-alkaline magmas

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors proposed that an enriched subcontinental mantle provides a viable alternative source for the observed K-h variations and for the increased LIL-element contents found in continental margin calc-alkaline magmas.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

A Guide to the Chemical Classification of the Common Volcanic Rocks

TL;DR: In this paper, a system was presented whereby volcanic rocks may be classified chemically as follows: Subalkaline Rocks:A.B. Tholeiitic basalt series:Tholeitic picrite-basalt; tholeiite, tholeitic andesite; dacite; rhyolite.
Journal ArticleDOI

Trace element fractionation and the origin of tholeiitic and alkaline magma types

TL;DR: In this article, it was shown that the abundance of large ion elements in alkaline basalts cannot be consistently explained by fractional crystallization processes and that these characteristics are produced by previous partial melting episodes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Origin and development of marginal basins in the western Pacific

TL;DR: In this paper, the existence of low density, high temperature upper mantle is indicated by the lack of a large gravity anomaly over the shallow oceanic crust of the inter-arc basin, by high heat flow there, and by anomalously high attenuation of shear waves passing through the upper mantle beneath the extensional zone.
Journal ArticleDOI

Geochemical evolution during fractional crystallisation of a periodically refilled magma chamber

TL;DR: A realistic model of volcanic plumbing predicts that most of the established major, trace and isotopic chemical features of the common basalts could have been imposed during magma evolution in high level magma chambers, for which process there is extensive independent field and phase equilibria evidence.
Journal ArticleDOI

Nickel partitioning between olivine and silicate melt

TL;DR: Partitioning of Ni between olivine and silicate melt has been determined for compositions in the system Fo-Ab-An (1 atm) for temperatures ranging from 1250°C to 1450°c.
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