scispace - formally typeset
Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Viscous dissipation, slab melting, and post-subduction volcanism in south-central Baja California, Mexico

Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
In this paper, the authors present a physical model that sheds light onto the origin of the post-subduction volcanism in Baja California and show that it is indeed possible for rocks to reach their solidus temperature by means of this mechanism.
Abstract
Volcanic activity continued to occur along the length of the Baja California Peninsula (northwestern Mexico) even after the cessation of subduction during the middle Miocene. This volcanism occurred mainly in monogenetic volcanic fields, erupting lavas with a wide variety of compositions, including: adakites, niobium-enriched basalts, high-niobium basalts, and high-magnesian andesites. The chemical compositions of these magmas suggest an origin in partially melted basaltic oceanic crust that was subsequently subducted below the peninsula. Several attempts have been made to explain the origin and compositional diversity of post-subduction volcanism in Baja California. Many of these attempts rely on the hypothesis that the magmas were formed through adiabatic decompression of upwelling asthenosphere in direct response to the formation of a window or tear in the subducted slab. This process, however, cannot offer a satisfactory explanation for all existing observations, particularly the lithospheric structure, of Baja California. Here, we present a physical model that sheds light onto the origin of the post-subduction volcanism in Baja California. The model calls upon viscous dissipation as the causative agent of volcanism. Our starting conjecture is that shearing along a low-viscosity channel confined between the stalled oceanic slab and continental crust of Baja California peninsula caused partial melting at moderate depths following cessation of subduction. Our modeling results show that it is indeed possible for rocks to reach their solidus temperature by means of this mechanism. Numerical results indicate that shear heating could lead to a temperature increase of close to 200 °C at a depth of 30 km, sufficient to produce more than 30% melt by volume.

read more

Content maybe subject to copyright    Report

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Implication of corona formation in a metatroctolite to the granulite facies overprint of HP–UHP rocks in the Moldanubian Zone (Bohemian Massif)

TL;DR: In this paper, a metatroctolite at the contact between felsic granulite and migmatites of the Gfohlite from the Moldanubian Zone was used to provide evidence of the magmatic and metamorphic evolution of the rocks.
Journal ArticleDOI

Seismic Structure beneath the Gulf of California: a Contribution from Group Velocity Measurements

TL;DR: In this article, the authors compute group velocity maps for Rayleigh waves from 10 to 150 s using earthquakes recorded by broad-band stations of the Network of Autonomously Recording Seismographs in Baja California and Mexico mainland, UNM in Mexico, BOR, DPP and GOR in southern California and TUC in Arizona.
Journal ArticleDOI

Volatile sources, sinks and pathways: A helium-carbon isotope study of Baja California fluids and gases

TL;DR: In this paper, helium and carbon isotopic and relative abundance data sampled from gas and fluid localities (n = 12) across northern Baja California, Mexico, were reported, indicating complex interplay between regional mantle degassing, faulting-assisted migration of crustal fluids, and volatile sequestration via secondary processes (e.g., calcite precipitation).
Journal ArticleDOI

A bottom-driven mechanism for distributed faulting in the Gulf of California rift

TL;DR: In this article, the authors explore the effects of bottom-driven shear on the deformation of a brittle elastic-plastic layer with the help of pseudo-three dimensional numerical models that include side forces.
References
More filters
Book ChapterDOI

Composition of the Continental Crust

TL;DR: In this paper, the present-day composition of the continental crust, the methods employed to derive these estimates, and the implications of continental crust composition for the formation of the continents, Earth differentiation, and its geochemical inventories are discussed.
Book

Rheology of the earth

TL;DR: In this article, the authors introduce the Continuum Approach to Earth Rheology from microphysics, which is based on the atomic basis of deformation, elasticity, strength, failure and plasticity.
Journal ArticleDOI

A new parameterization of hydrous mantle melting

TL;DR: In this article, a new parameterization for melt fraction as a function of pressure, temperature, water content and modal cpx is presented, based on knowledge gained from recent advances in the fields of thermodynamic modeling as well as experimental investigations of peridotite melting and hydrous equilibria.
Journal ArticleDOI

Pacific-North America Plate Tectonics of the Neogene Southwestern United States: An Update

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors use updated rotations within the Pacific-Antarctica-Africa-North America plate circuit to calculate plate reconstructions for times since chron 13 (33 Ma).
Related Papers (5)