Meyer, Romain et al. (2009): Trace element and isotope constraints on crustal anatexis by upwelling mantle melts in the North Atlantic igneous province; an example from the Isle of Rum, NW Scotland

Leg/Site/Hole:
ODP 104
Identifier:
2009-060831
georefid

10.1017/S0016756809006244
doi

Creator:
Meyer, Romain
Katholieke Universiteit Leuven, Geo-Instituut, Leuven, Belgium
author

Nicoll, Graeme R.
British Geological Survey, United Kingdom
author

Hertogen, Jan
Uppsala University, Sweden
author

Troll, Valentin R.
University of Dublin, Ireland
author

Ellam, Robert M.
Scottish Universities Environmental Research Centre, United Kingdom
author

Emeleus, C. Henry
University of Durham, United Kingdom
author

Identification:
Trace element and isotope constraints on crustal anatexis by upwelling mantle melts in the North Atlantic igneous province; an example from the Isle of Rum, NW Scotland
2009
In: Jerram, Dougal A. (prefacer), Goodenough, Kathryn M. (prefacer), Troll, Valentin R. (prefacer), From the British Tertiary into the future; modern perspectives on the British Paleogene and North Atlantic igneous provinces
Cambridge University Press, London, United Kingdom
146
3
382-399
Sr and Nd isotope ratios, together with lithophile trace elements, have been measured in a representative set of igneous rocks and Lewisian gneisses from the Isle of Rum in order to unravel the petrogenesis of the felsic rocks that erupted in the early stages of Palaeogene magmatism in the North Atlantic Igneous Province (NAIP). The Rum rhyodacites appear to be the products of large amounts of melting of Lewisian amphibolite gneiss. The Sr and Nd isotopic composition of the magmas can be explained without invoking an additional granulitic crustal component. Concentrations of the trace element Cs in the rhyodacites strongly suggests that the gneiss parent rock had experienced Cs and Rb loss prior to Palaeogene times, possibly during a Caledonian event. This depletion caused heterogeneity with respect to (super 87) Sr/ (super 86) Sr in the crustal source of silicic melts. Other igneous rock types on Rum (dacites, early gabbros) are mixtures of crustal melts and and primary mantle melts. Forward Rare Earth Element modelling shows that late stage picritic melts on Rum are close analogues for the parent melts of the Rum Layered Suite, and for the mantle melts that caused crustal anatexis of the Lewisian gneiss. These primary mantle melts have close affinities to Mid-Oceanic Ridge Basalts (MORB), whose trace element content varies from slightly depleted to slightly enriched. Crustal anatexis is a common process in the rift-to-drift evolution during continental break-up and the formation of Volcanic Rifted Margins systems. The "early felsic-later mafic" volcanic rock associations from Rum are compared to similar associations recovered from the now-drowned seaward-dipping wedges on the shelf of SE Greenland and on the Voring Plateau (Norwegian Sea). These three regions show geochemical differences that result from variations in the regional crustal composition and the depth at which crustal anatexis took place.
Coverage:Geographic coordinates:
North:67.4254
West:-6.3000East: 4.3436
South:56.5500

Isotope geochemistry; Igneous and metamorphic petrology; alkaline earth metals; anatexis; Arctic Ocean; basement; Cenozoic; crust; Europe; faults; gabbros; geophysical methods; geophysical surveys; Great Britain; Hebrides; Highland region Scotland; igneous rocks; Inner Hebrides; Inverness-shire Scotland; isotope ratios; isotopes; large igneous provinces; Leg 104; Lewisian Complex; lithostratigraphy; magmatism; melting; metals; metamorphic rocks; Nd-144/Nd-143; neodymium; North Atlantic igneous province; Norwegian Sea; Ocean Drilling Program; Paleogene; petrology; plutonic rocks; Precambrian; protoliths; rare earths; Rhum; rhyodacites; Scotland; seismic methods; Sr-87/Sr-86; stable isotopes; stratigraphic units; strontium; surveys; tectonics; Tertiary; trace elements; United Kingdom; upwelling; volcanic rocks; Voring Plateau; Western Europe;

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