Perez-Gussinye, M. et al. (2001): Serpentinization and magmatism during extension at non-volcanic margins; the effect of initial lithospheric structure

Leg/Site/Hole:
ODP 149
ODP 173
ODP 173 1069
ODP 149 897
ODP 149 900
Identifier:
2003-063790
georefid

Creator:
Perez-Gussinye, M.
Geomar FZ, Kiel, Federal Republic of Germany
author

Reston, T. J.
Southampton Oceanography Center, United Kingdom
author

Phipps Morgan, J.
University of Hawaii, United States
author

Identification:
Serpentinization and magmatism during extension at non-volcanic margins; the effect of initial lithospheric structure
2001
In: Wilson, R. C. L. (editor), Whitmarsh, R. B. (editor), Taylor, B. (editor), Froitzheim, N. (editor), Non-volcanic rifting of continental margins; a comparison of evidence from land and sea
Geological Society of London, London, United Kingdom
187
551-576
At several non-volcanic margins serpentinized peridotites occur within a wide continent ocean transition (COT) and beneath the edge of the thinned continental crust. However, other margins such as the Woodlark Basin appear to have a sharp COT and no reported serpentinites. We investigate the thermal, magmatic and rheological evolution of margins during extension as a function of initial lithospheric structure, rift duration and stretching factor. For cratonic and old orogen models, the entire crust should become brittle at stretching factors c. 3-4. The resultant crust-cutting faults allow water to reach and serpentinize the mantle, leading to the development of serpentinite decollements at the crust-mantle boundary and exhumation of mantle at the COT. Our predictions are consistent with the spatial limit and thickness of serpentinites at the SW Greenland and West Iberia margins, and the Rockall Trough. They also explain the absence of a broad zone of unroofed, serpentinized mantle at the COT of the Woodlark Basin: here the crust was too thick and hot for serpentinites to form before break-up. Larger melt production than in the West Iberia type margins and concentration of the lithospheric strength in the crust leads to synchronous crustal separation and lithospheric failure, yielding a sharp COT.
English
Serial
Coverage:Geographic coordinates:
North:40.4337
West:-11.4638East: -11.4638
South:40.4337

Solid-earth geophysics; Igneous and metamorphic petrology; Atlantic Ocean; continental crust; continental margin; crust; East Atlantic; Europe; extension tectonics; Iberian abyssal plain; Iberian Peninsula; Labrador Sea; Leg 149; Leg 173; lithosphere; magmatism; metasomatism; North Atlantic; Northeast Atlantic; Ocean Drilling Program; oceanic crust; oceanic lithosphere; ODP Site 1069; ODP Site 897; ODP Site 900; Portugal; serpentinization; Southern Europe; Spain; tectonics; Woodlark Basin;

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