Ingle, Stephanie et al. (2007): Depleted mantle wedge and sediment fingerprint in unusual basalts from the Manihiki Plateau, central Pacific Ocean

Leg/Site/Hole:
DSDP 33
DSDP 33 317
Identifier:
2007-075929
georefid

10.1130/G23741A.1
doi

Creator:
Ingle, Stephanie
Tokyo Institute of Technology, Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, Tokyo, Japan
author

Mahoney, John J.
University of Hawaii, United States
author

Sato, Hiroshi
Senshu University, Japan
author

Coffin, Millard F.
University of Tokyo, Japan
author

Kimura, Jun-Ichi
Shimane University, Japan
author

Hirano, Naoto
Chiba University, Japan
author

Nakanishi, Masao
author

Identification:
Depleted mantle wedge and sediment fingerprint in unusual basalts from the Manihiki Plateau, central Pacific Ocean
2007
Geology (Boulder)
Geological Society of America (GSA), Boulder, CO, United States
35
7
595-598
Numerous large igneous provinces formed in the Pacific Ocean during Early Cretaceous time, but their origins and relations are poorly understood. We present new geochronological and geochemical data on rocks from the Manihiki Plateau and compare these results to those for other Cretaceous Pacific plateaus. A dredged Manihiki basalt gives an (super 40) Ar- (super 39) Ar age of 117.9+ or -3.5 Ma (2sigma ), essentially contemporaneous with the Ontong Java Plateau approximately 2500 km to the west, and the possibly related Hikurangi Plateau approximately 3000 km to the south. Drilled Manihiki lavas are tholeiitic with incompatible trace element abundances similar to those of Ontong Java basalts. These lavas may result from high degrees of partial melting during the main eruptive phase of plateau formation. There are two categories of dredged lavas from the Danger Islands Troughs, which bisect the plateau. The first is alkalic lavas having strong enrichments in light rare earth and large-ion lithophile elements; these lavas may represent late-stage activity, as one sample yields an (super 40) Ar- (super 39) Ar age of 99.5+ or -0.7 Ma. The second category consists of tholeiitic basalts with U-shaped incompatible element patterns and unusually low abundances of several elements; these basalts record a mantle component not previously observed in Manihiki, Ontong Java, or Hikurangi lavas. Their trace element characteristics may result from extensive melting of depleted mantle wedge material mixed with small amounts of volcaniclastic sediment. We are unaware of comparable basalts elsewhere.
English
Serial
Coverage:Geographic coordinates:
North:-5.0000
West:-170.0000East: -160.0000
South:-15.0000

Igneous and metamorphic petrology; Geochemistry of rocks, soils, and sediments; absolute age; affinities; Ar/Ar; Australasia; basalts; Central Pacific; cores; Cretaceous; dates; Deep Sea Drilling Project; dredged samples; DSDP Site 317; East Pacific; geochemistry; Hikurangi Trough; igneous rocks; large igneous provinces; lava; Leg 33; lithophile elements; Lower Cretaceous; Manihiki Plateau; mantle; mantle wedges; marine sediments; Mesozoic; metals; New Zealand; Ontong Java Plateau; Pacific Ocean; rare earths; sediments; South Pacific; Southeast Pacific; tholeiitic basalt; trace elements; volcanic rocks; volcaniclastics; West Pacific;

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