Di Vincenzo, G. et al. (2002): (super 40) Ar- (super 39) Ar investigation of volcanic clasts in glaciogenic sediments at sites 1079 and 1103 (ODP Leg 178, Antarctic Peninsula)

Leg/Site/Hole:
ODP 175
ODP 178
ODP 175 1079
ODP 178 1103
Identifier:
2003-022417
georefid

10.2973/odp.proc.sr.178.232.2001
doi

Creator:
Di Vincenzo, G.
CNR, Instituto di Geocronologia e Geochimica Isotopica, Pisa, Italy
author

Caburlotto, A.
Istituto Nazionale di Oceanografia e di Geofisica Sperimentale, Italy
author

Camerlenghi, Angelo
Ocean Drilling Program, United States
author

Identification:
(super 40) Ar- (super 39) Ar investigation of volcanic clasts in glaciogenic sediments at sites 1079 and 1103 (ODP Leg 178, Antarctic Peninsula)
2002
In: Baker, Peter F. (editor), Camerlenghi, Angelo (editor), Acton, Gary D. (editor), Brachfeld, Stefanie A., Cowan, Ellen A., Daniels, James, Domack, Eugene W., Escutia, Carlota, Evans, Andrew J., Eyles, Nicholas, Guyodo, Yohan J. B., Hatfield, Kate L., Iorio, Marina, Iwai, Masao, Kyte, Frank T., Lauer, Christine, Maldonado, Andres, Moerz, Tobias, Osterman, Lisa E., Pudsey, Carol J., Schuffert, Jeffrey D., Sjunneskog, Charlotte M., Weinheimer, Amy L., Williams, Trevor, Winter, Diane M., Wolf-Welling, Thomas C. W., Ramsay, Anthony T. S. (editor), Proceedings of the Ocean Drilling Program, scientific results, Antarctic glacial history and sea-level change; covering Leg 178 of the cruises of the drilling vessel JOIDES Resolution; Punta Arenas, Chile, to Cape Town, South Africa; sites 1095-1103; 5 February-9 April 1998
Texas A&M University, Ocean Drilling Program, College Station, TX, United States
178
Three selected diamictite samples recovered within sequence group S3 at Sites 1097 (Sample 178-1097A-27R-1, 35-58 cm) and 1103 (Samples 178-1103A-31R-2, 0-4 cm, and 36R-3, 4-8 cm) of Ocean Drilling Program Leg 178 have been investigated by scanning electron microscope, electron microprobe, and (super 40) Ar- (super 39) Ar laser-heating techniques. They contain variable proportions of fragments of volcanic rock groundmass (mostly in the range of 100-150 mu m) with textures ranging from microcrystalline to ipocrystalline. Their rounded shapes indicate mechanical reworking. Fresh groundmass glasses, recognized only in grains from samples of Site 1103, show mainly a subalkaline affinity on the basis of total alkali-silica variations. However, they are characterized by relatively high TiO (sub 2) and P (sub 2) O (sub 5) contents (1.4-2.8 and 0.1-0.9 wt%, respectively). Because of the small size of homogeneous grains (100-150 mu m), they were not suitable for single-grain total fusion (super 40) Ar- (super 39) Ar analyses. The incremental laser-heating technique was applied to milligram-sized samples (only for Samples 178-1097A-27R-1, 35-58 cm, and 178-1103A-36R-3, 4-8 cm) and to various small fractions (each consisting of 10 grains for the sample from Site 1097 and 30 grains for samples from Site 1103). The latter approach resulted in more effective resolution of sample heterogeneity. Argon ages from the small fractions show significantly different ranges in the three samples: 75-173 Ma for Sample 178-1097A-27R-1, 35-58 cm, 18-57 Ma for Sample 178-1103A-31R-2, 0-4 cm, and 7.6-50 Ma for Sample 178-1103A-36R-3, 4-8 cm. Ca/K ratios derived from argon isotopes at Site 1103 suggest that the data mainly refer to outgassing of groundmass glass. At Site 1103, we observe an overall apparent age increase with decreasing sample depth. This is compatible with glacial erosion that affected with time deeper levels of a volcanic sequence previously deposited on the continent.
Coverage:Geographic coordinates:
North:-11.5547
West:-65.2755East: 13.1833
South:-63.5958

Geochronology; absolute age; Antarctic Ocean; Antarctic Peninsula; Antarctica; Ar/Ar; biostratigraphy; Cenozoic; clastic rocks; clasts; cores; Cretaceous; dates; diamictite; electron probe data; Leg 175; Leg 178; Mesozoic; Neogene; Ocean Drilling Program; ocean floors; ODP Site 1079; ODP Site 1103; Paleogene; sedimentary rocks; SEM data; Tertiary; volcaniclastics;

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