Sigurdsson, Haraldur et al. (2001): Oxygen isotope ratios of Central American Cenozoic ignimbrites

Leg/Site/Hole:
ODP 165
Identifier:
2004-015234
georefid

Creator:
Sigurdsson, Haraldur
University of Rhode Island, Graduate School of Oceanography, Narragansett, RI, United States
author

Karlsson, Haraldur R.
Texas Tech University, United States
author

Jordan, Benjamin R.
University of Texas, United States
author

Carey, Steven N.
author

Browning, James M.
author

Rogers, Robert D.
author

Identification:
Oxygen isotope ratios of Central American Cenozoic ignimbrites
2001
In: Anonymous, Geological Society of America, 2001 annual meeting
Geological Society of America (GSA), Boulder, CO, United States
33
6
139
The Central American Cenozoic ignimbrites represent one of the largest known terrestrial provinces of silicic magmas. Evidence from tephra layers in ODP Leg 165 Caribbean deep-sea cores indicates that the ignimbrites were largely erupted during two well-defined episodes or flare-ups, one in the Miocene (Coyol group) and the other in late Eocene (Matagalpa group). This Cenozoic volcanism is markedly bimodal, with the huge volume of silicic magmas dominating the basaltic ones and intermediate compositions relatively minor. We obtained oxygen isotope compositions of forty whole-rock samples of volcanic rocks from Nicaragua and Honduras. Unaltered samples of ignimbrites were obtained by collecting glassy or obsidian clasts from the ignimbrite matrix, or more commonly by sampling dense, unaltered and glassy (10 to 200 cm thick) vitrophyres at the base of ignimbrite flows. Oxygen was extracted from these rocks using the BrF (sub 5) method. During this period, NBS-28 yielded an average of 9.71+ or -0.1 per mil (w.r.t. V-SMOW). Analyses of Honduran silicic rocks range from delta (super 18) O of +13.5 to 16.4+0.2 per mil and oxygen isotopic ratios in Nicaraguan silicic vitrophyres are similar, in the range 12.2 to 17.7 per mil. In contrast, delta (super 18) O of Honduran Cenozoic basalts ranges from 7.3 to 11.9 per mil and Nicaraguan basalts from 5.8 to 10.1 per mil. Thus there is no overlap in the range of silicic and basaltic rocks from these regions. Cenozoic Honduran andesites have a range of delta (super 18) O from 7.6 to 11.8 per mil. The uniformly high oxygen isotope ratios in Central American vitrophyres are unlikely to be due to post-eruption hydration or alteration of these glassy rocks. Alternatively, we consider that these high ratios may be a reflection of a crustal source in the generation of these silicic magmas.
English
Coverage:Geographic coordinates:
North:22.0000
West:-89.1500East: -60.0000
South:9.0000

Isotope geochemistry; Igneous and metamorphic petrology; andesites; Atlantic Ocean; basaltic composition; Caribbean Sea; Cenozoic; Central America; Coyol Group; Eocene; Honduras; hydration; igneous rocks; ignimbrite; isotope ratios; isotopes; Leg 165; magmas; magmatism; Matagalpa Group; Miocene; Neogene; Nicaragua; North Atlantic; O-18/O-16; Ocean Drilling Program; oxygen; Paleogene; porphyry; pyroclastics; siliceous composition; stable isotopes; Tertiary; upper Eocene; vitrophyre; volcanic rocks;

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