scispace - formally typeset
Journal ArticleDOI

U-Pb geochronology of mid-Paleozoic plutonism in western New Zealand: Implications for S-type granite generation and growth of the east Gondwana margin

Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
New U-Pb isotope-dilution-thermal ionization mass spectrometry (ID-TIMS) ages for 30 granitic plutons along the New Zealand sector of the East Gondwanan active margin reveal a highly episodic emplacement history and crustal growth pattern as discussed by the authors.
Abstract
New U-Pb isotope-dilution-thermal ionization mass spectrometry (ID-TIMS) ages (371–305 Ma) for 30 granitic plutons along the New Zealand sector of the East Gondwanan active margin reveal a highly episodic emplacement history and crustal growth pattern. The Late Devonian-late Carboniferous ages also establish specific links with both the mostly older, Lachlan and the mostly younger, New England fold belts of eastern Australia. Dated plutons are representative of two S- and I-type suite pairs, the volumetrically predominant Karamea-Paringa (371–360 Ma) and minor Ridge-Tobin (355–342 Ma) pulses, as well as sporadic Foulwind Suite A-type granites (350–305 Ma). Emplacement of the bulk of the dominant ∼3400 km 2 Karamea Suite S-type granite-granodiorite plutons within a 2.11 Ma interval is explained by major and intimate intrusion of mantle-derived magma into largely metasedimentary crust during intra-arc extension of previously overthickened crust. Transient emplacement rates were thus of similar magnitude as some young ignimbrite flare-ups and an order of magnitude greater than long-term averages for Mesozoic-Cenozoic cordilleran batholiths of the western Americas. Extension likely was terminated abruptly by resumption of convergence, possibly associated with amalgamation of the Buller and Takaka terranes, between 368 and 355 Ma. Significant crustal growth occurred during generation of the two S-type suites, where mantle basalt contributed mass, and heat for rapid melting, during transient intra- or backarc extensional episodes. In contrast, the I-type suites were dominated by partial melting of meta-igneous crust, and they are relatively small in volume. The Karamea S-type suite shares striking similarities in terms of age, composition, and extensional tectonic setting with S-type granites of the Melbourne terrane of the Lachlan fold belt. Both regions may have formed in a backarc position with respect to the Late Devonian-early Carboniferous subduction zone in the New England fold belt. Foulwind Suite A-type magmatism in New Zealand overlaps in age with the widespread 320–285 Ma A- and I-type magmatism in the northern New England fold belt. The likely continuation of the New England subduction system must have subsequently been removed from outboard of the New Zealand region after 320–285 Ma magmatism, and prior to Triassic accretion of a Permian oceanic arc terrane to the New Zealand margin.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Plate tectonics in the late Paleozoic

TL;DR: In this article, a model for the late Paleozoic (410-250 million years ago) is presented, together with a review of the underlying data, which can be used for numerical mantle modeling, and serve as a general framework for understanding late paleozoic tectonics.
Journal ArticleDOI

Antarctica — Before and after Gondwana

TL;DR: The origin of the Antarctic continent can be traced to a relatively small late Archaean cratonic nucleus centred on the Terre Adelie regions of East Antarctica and the Gawler Craton region of South Australia as discussed by the authors.

Plate Tectonics in the Late Paleozoic

TL;DR: In this paper, a model for the late Paleozoic (410-250 million years ago) is presented, together with a review of the underlying data, which can be used for numerical mantle modeling, and serve as a general framework for understanding late paleozoic tectonics.
Journal ArticleDOI

A review of the geochronology and geochemistry of Late Yanshanian (Cretaceous) plutons along the Fujian coastal area of southeastern China: Implications for magma evolution related to slab break-off and rollback in the Cretaceous

TL;DR: In this paper, geochronological, geochemical and geological data from thirty intrusions are summarised in the Fujian coastal area, and the data provide distinct magmatic, geochemic and tectonic patterns in the area.
Journal ArticleDOI

High-level stratigraphic scheme for New Zealand rocks

TL;DR: This paper introduced 14 new high-level stratigraphic names to augment existing names and to hierarchically organize all of New Zealand's onland and offshore Cambrian-Holocene rocks and unconsolidated deposits.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Trace element discrimination diagrams for the tectonic interpretation of granitic rocks

TL;DR: In this article, a data bank containing over 600 high quality trace element analyses of granites from known settings was used to demonstrate using ORG-normalized geochemical patterns and element-SiO2 plots that most of these granite groups exhibit distinctive trace element characteristics.
Journal ArticleDOI

A-type granites: geochemical characteristics, discrimination and petrogenesis

TL;DR: A-type granites as mentioned in this paper were found to have high SiO2, Na2O+K2O, Fe/Mg, Ga/Al, Zr, Nb, Ga, Y and Ce, and low CaO and Sr.
Journal ArticleDOI

A geochemical classification for granitic rocks

TL;DR: Barbarin et al. as mentioned in this paper used the modified alkali-lime index (MALI) and the aluminum saturation (ASI) for the classification of caledonian post-orogenic granites.
Journal ArticleDOI

Nature and origin of A-type granites with particular reference to southeastern Australia

TL;DR: In the Lachlan Fold Belt of southeastern Australia, Upper Devonian A-type granite suites were emplaced after the Lower Devonian I-type granites of the Bega Batholith as mentioned in this paper.
Related Papers (5)