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Relationships between mafic and peralkaline silicic magmatism in continental rift settings: A petrological, geochemical and isotopic study of the Gedemsa volcano, Central Ethiopian rift

TLDR
Petrological and geochemical data are reported for basalts and silicic peralkaline rocks from the Quaternary Gedemsa volcano, northern Ethiopian rift, with the aim of discussing the petrogenesis of peralkal magmas and the significance of the Daly Gap occurring at local and regional scales as mentioned in this paper.
Abstract
Petrological and geochemical data are reported for basalts and silicic peralkaline rocks from the Quaternary Gedemsa volcano, northern Ethiopian rift, with the aim of discussing the petrogenesis of peralkaline magmas and the significance of the Daly Gap occurring at local and regional scales. Incompatible element vs incompatible element diagrams display smooth positive trends; the isotope ratios of the silicic rocks (Sr/Sr ˆ 0 70406---0 70719; Nd/Nd ˆ 0 51274---0 51279) encompass those of the mafic rocks. These data suggest a genetic link between rhyolites and basalts, but are not definitive in establishing whether silicic rocks are related to basalts through fractional crystallization or partial melting. Geochemical modelling of incompatible vs compatible elements excludes the possibility that peralkaline rhyolites are generated by melting of basaltic rocks, and indicates a derivation by fractional crystallization plus moderate assimilation of wall rocks (AFC) starting from trachytes; the latter have exceedingly low contents of compatible elements, which precludes a derivation by basalt melting. Continuous AFC from basalt to rhyolite, with small rates of crustal assimilation, best explains the geochemical data. This process generated a zoned magma chamber whose silicic upper part acted as a density filter for mafic magmas and was preferentially tapped; mafic magmas, ponding at the bottom, were erupted only during post-caldera stages, intensively mingled with silicic melts. The large number of caldera depressions found in the northern Ethiopian rift and their coincidence with zones of positive gravity anomalies suggest the occurrence of numerous magma chambers where evolutionary processes generated silicic peralkaline melts starting from mafic parental magmas. This suggests that the petrological and volcanological model proposed for Gedemsa may have regional significance, thus furnishing an explanation for the large-volume peralkaline ignimbrites in the Ethiopian rift.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Continental rift evolution: From rift initiation to incipient break-up in the Main Ethiopian Rift, East Africa

TL;DR: The main Ethiopian rift is a key sector of the East African Rift System that connects the Afar depression, at Red Sea-Gulf of Aden junction, with the Turkana depression and Kenya Rift to the South as mentioned in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

Petrogenesis and tectonic significance of the ~850 Ma Gangbian alkaline complex in South China: Evidence from in situ zircon U-Pb dating, Hf-O isotopes and whole-rock geochemistry

TL;DR: The Gangbian alkaline complex as discussed by the authors is composed of Si-undersaturated pyroxene syenites and Si-saturated to -oversaturated syenite and quartz monzonites.
Journal ArticleDOI

850-790 Ma bimodal volcanic and intrusive rocks in northern Zhejiang, South China: A major episode of continental rift magmatism during the breakup of Rodinia

TL;DR: In this paper, the Shenwu dolerite dykes, the Daolinshan granite-diabase complex, and Shangshu bimodal (basalt-rhyolite) volcanic rocks were studied for mid-Neoproterozoic igneous rocks in northern Zhejiang Province, China.
Journal ArticleDOI

Silicic magma reservoirs in the Earth's crust

TL;DR: In this article, the authors focus on recent claims that magma columns within the Earth's crust are mostly kept at high crystallinity (mush zones) and that the dynamics within those mush columns, albeit modulated by external factors (e.g., regional stress field, rheology of the crust, pre-existing tectonic structure), play an important role in controlling how magmas evolve, degas, and ultimately erupt.
Journal ArticleDOI

Neoproterozoic bimodal magmatism in the Cathaysia Block of South China and its tectonic significance

TL;DR: The Mamianshan felsic rocks were most likely generated by partial melting of the regional Paleoproterozoic Mayuan amphibolites as mentioned in this paper, with an eruption age of 818 ± 9 Ma.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Trace element and isotopic effects of combined wallrock assimilation and fractional crystallization

TL;DR: In this paper, the mass assimilation rate is an arbitrary fraction(r) of the fractional crystallization rate, where r < 1 is a combination of zone refining and fractional scaling.
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Magmatism at rift zones: The generation of volcanic continental margins and flood basalts

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors show that the production of magmatically active rifted margins and the effusion of flood basalts onto the adjacent continents can be explained by a simple model of rifting above a thermal anomaly in the underlying mantle.
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Chemical mass transfer in magmatic processes IV. A revised and internally consistent thermodynamic model for the interpolation and extrapolation of liquid-solid equilibria in magmatic systems at elevated temperatures and pressures

TL;DR: In this article, a regular solution-type thermodynamic model for twelve-component silicate liquids in the system SiO2-TiO 2-Al 2O3-Fe2O 3-Cr2O3 -FeO-MgO-CaO-Na2O-K 2O-P2O5-H2O is calibrated.
Journal ArticleDOI

Determination of REE, Ba, Fe, Mg, Na and K in carbonaceous and ordinary chondrites

TL;DR: In this paper, the exact determination of REE and Ba abundances in three carbonaceous (Orgueil Cl, Murchison C2 and Allende C3) and seven olivine-bronzite chondrites were carried out by mass spectrometric isotope dilution technique.
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