Clift, Peter D. and Lee, Jongman (1998): Temporal evolution of the Mariana Arc during rifting of the Mariana Trough traced through the volcaniclastic rocks

Leg/Site/Hole:
DSDP 59
DSDP 60
DSDP 59 451
DSDP 60 458
DSDP 60 459
Identifier:
2012-050268
georefid

10.1111/j.1440-1738.1998.00206.x
doi

Creator:
Clift, Peter D.
Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, Department of Geology and Geophysics, Woods Hole, MA, United States
author

Lee, Jongman
University of Texas at Dallas, United States
author

Identification:
Temporal evolution of the Mariana Arc during rifting of the Mariana Trough traced through the volcaniclastic rocks
1998
In: Stern, Robert J. (prefacer), Arima, Makoto (prefacer), Izu-Bonin-Mariana Arc system
Wiley Blackwell on behalf of Geological Society of Japan, Tsukuba, Japan
7
3
496-512
The sedimentary sequences that accumulate around volcanic arcs may be used to reconstruct the history of volcanism provided the degree of along-margin sediment transport is modest, and that reworking of old sedimentary or volcanic sequences does not contribute substantially to the sediment record. In the Mariana arc, the rare earth and trace element compositions of ash layers sampled by Deep Sea Drilling Project (DSDP) site 451 on the West Mariana Ridge, and sites 458 and 459 on the Mariana Forearc, were used to reconstruct the evolution of the arc volcanic front during rifting of the Mariana Trough. Ion microprobe analysis of individual glass shards from the sediments shows that the glasses have slightly light rare earth element (LREE)-enriched compositions, and trace element compositions typical of arc tholeiites. The B/Be ratio is a measure of the involvement of subducted sediment in petrogenesis, and is unaffected by fractional crystallization. This ratio is variable over the period of rifting, increasing up-section at site 451 and reaching a maximum in sediments dated at 3-4 Ma, approximately 3-4 million years after rifting began. This may reflect increased sediment subduction during early rifting and roll-back of the Pacific lithosphere. Parallel trends are not seen in the enrichment of incompatible high field strength (HFSE), large ion lithophile (LILE) or rare earth elements (REE), suggesting that flux from the subducting slab alone does not control the degree of melting. Re-establishment of arc volcanism on the trench side of the basin at ca 3 Ma resulted in volcanism with relative enrichment in incompatible REE, HFSE and LILE, although these became more depleted with time, possibly due to melt extraction from the mantle source as it passed under the developing back-arc spreading axis, prior to melting under the volcanic front.
English
Serial
Coverage:Geographic coordinates:
North:18.0053
West:143.1634East: 147.1805
South:17.5145

Solid-earth geophysics; General geochemistry; Igneous and metamorphic petrology; age; alkaline earth metals; barium; basalts; basins; beryllium; boron; Cenozoic; clastic sediments; Deep Sea Drilling Project; DSDP Site 451; DSDP Site 458; DSDP Site 459; fore-arc basins; igneous rocks; IPOD; island arcs; Leg 59; Leg 60; mantle; Mariana Arc; Mariana Trough; melting; metals; Miocene; Neogene; North Pacific; Northwest Pacific; Pacific Ocean; Paleogene; plate tectonics; Pliocene; pyroclastics; rare earths; rifting; sediments; slabs; strontium; subduction; Tertiary; tholeiite; trace elements; turbidite; upper Miocene; volcanic ash; volcanic rocks; volcaniclastics; West Mariana Ridge; West Pacific; zirconium;

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