![]() | A Late Oligocene Suprasubduction Setting in the Westernmost Mediterranean Revealed by Intrusive Pyroxenite Dikes in the Ronda Peridotite (Southern Spain) Auteur(s) : Marchesi, C. Garrido, Carlos J. Bosch, Delphine Bodinier, Jean-Louis Hidas, Karoly Padron-Navarta, Jose A. Gervilla, Fernando Auteurs secondaires : Departamento De Mineralogía Y Petrología, Facultad De Ciencias, Universidad De Granada ; Université du Québec Instituto Andaluz de Ciencias de la terra, Granada ; Université du Québec Géosciences Montpellier ; Université des Antilles et de la Guyane (UAG) - Institut national des sciences de l'Univers (INSU - CNRS) - Université de Montpellier (UM) - Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS) Australian National University (ANU) Éditeur(s) : HAL CCSD University of Chicago Press Résumé : International audience Contrasting tectonic reconstructions of the westernmost Mediterranean have been proposed to explain the origin of the Alboran marine basin contemporaneously with Cenozoic convergence between the African and European plates. Cr-rich pyroxenites in the Ronda massif record the geochemical processes occurring in the subcontinental mantle of the Alboran domain in the Late Oligocene, thus constraining the geodynamic scenario of Cenozoic extension in the western Mediterranean lithosphere. Clinopyroxene in intrusive Cr-rich websterite dikes crosscutting the Ronda peridotite is strongly depleted in Nb-Ta and enriched in light rare earth elements, as typically observed in arc magmas, and is in trace element equilibrium with Neogene subduction-related lavas from the western and central Mediterranean. Sr-Nd-Pb radiogenic isotopes indicate that the mantle source of the Ronda pyroxenite dikes was contaminated by a subduction component released by detrital sediments likely deposited in passive continental margins. Rather than convective removal or delamination of the lithospheric root, our data strongly support Alboran geodynamic models that envisage slab rollback as the tectonic mechanism responsible for the Miocene lithospheric thinning. The Ronda Cr-rich pyroxenite dikes represent the earliest unambiguous manifestation of subduction-related magmatism in the western Mediterranean and testify to the involvement of terrigenous sediments in the primitive stages of subduction. ISSN: 0022-1376 hal-00745853 https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-00745853 DOI : 10.1086/663875 | Partager |
![]() | Geochemical characterization of the Kohistan arc (N Pakistan): Implications for the initiation and evolution of an oceanic subduction ; Caractérisation géochimique de l'arc du Kohistan (Nord Pakistan) : implications pour l'initiation et l'évolution d'une subduction océanique Auteur(s) : Dhuime, Bruno Auteurs secondaires : Géosciences Montpellier ; Université des Antilles et de la Guyane (UAG) - Institut national des sciences de l'Univers (INSU - CNRS) - Université de Montpellier (UM) - Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS) Université de Montpellier 2 Delphine Bosch Éditeur(s) : HAL CCSD Résumé : Subduction is one of the major geodynamical process active during the Earth evolution. The characterization of arc magmas, their evolution through space and time, and the relationship between arc magmatism and continental crust forming processes, constitute the main research topics in petrology and geochemistry since the last three decades. This study focuses on an exhumed portion of the Kohistan Arc (N Pakistan), which is an exceptional ‘in situ' laboratory to study and follow through time the processes active on subduction zones. Based on a pluri-geochemical approach, this study allows unraveling two major issues : 1/ The lack of a cogenetic relationship between the arc root (i.e. ultramafic rocks) and the overlying gabbroic crustal section. The Jijal ultramafic section does not bear a crustal origin and was emplaced at ~117 Ma via a magma-rock reaction between REE-depleted ‘boninite-like' melts and the pre-existing lithospheric mantle with Indian-MORB affinities; 2/ A three-stage geodynamical model covering the arc evolution through ~30 Ma. This model starts with the onset of the subduction followed by the building of the volcanic arc (1st stage). The 2nd stage corresponds to a major thermal event, characterized by abundant magma underplating and by granulitisation of the arc base. Recycling of the residual/cumulative lower crust into the convective asthenospheric mantle was efficient during this stage, and probably related to thermo-mechanical erosion processes. The last stage, between ~95 and 85 Ma, seals the end of the intra-oceanic subduction and corresponds to an “amagmatic” period. This step is followed by a voluminous, but short, magmatic pulse at ~85 Ma, occurring just before the arc-continent collision. At last, this study emphasizes the more mafic composition of the investigated crustal arc section when compared to the bulk continental crust. Nevertheless the arc section composition nicely fits with the lower continental crust average. Les zones de subduction représentent des zones d'évolution clés dans la compréhension des processus géologiques majeurs actifs sur notre planète. En particulier, la caractérisation et l'évolution des magmas générés dans les zones d'arcs océaniques et la relation entre leur genèse et les processus de croissance crustale sont des axes primordiaux. Cette étude est focalisée sur la portion d'arc océanique exhumée du Kohistan (Nord Pakistan) qui constitue un laboratoire exceptionnel pour appréhender cette problématique. Basée sur une approche géochimique multi-méthodes (éléments majeurs et en trace, isotopes), cette étude a permis d'établir : 1/ l'absence de relation génétique directe entre les roches ultrabasiques de la racine de l'arc et la section crustale sus-jacente. La formation de la séquence ultrabasique de Jijal se produit à ~117 Ma via une réaction de type magma-roche entre des liquides de type boninitique (appauvris en terres rares), et le manteau lithosphérique de type MORB-Indien ; 2/ un modèle géodynamique en trois stades majeurs résumant l'évolution de l'arc océanique et de la subduction sur une période d'environ 30 Ma. Ce modèle débute par l'initiation de la subduction et la formation de l'arc volcanique s.s. (1er stade) ; le 2ème stade correspond à un évènement thermique majeur. Il est représenté par un sous-placage important de magmas et une granulitisation intense de la base de l'arc. Le recyclage de la croûte inférieure cumulative et résiduelle, dans le manteau sous-jacent, se produit durant cette étape vraisemblablement suite à des processus d'érosion thermo-mécanique. Le dernier stade, entre 95 Ma et 85 Ma, scelle la fin du fonctionnement de la zone de subduction et correspond à une période amagmatique suivie par une brève reprise du magmatisme avant la collision de l'arc après 85 Ma. Enfin, une modélisation numérique comparative avec la croûte continentale globale met en évidence la composition significativement plus basique de la croûte de l'arc insulaire du Kohistan. De fortes similitudes sont en revanche observées entre la section d'arc étudiée et la croûte continentale inférieure. https://tel.archives-ouvertes.fr/tel-00437770 tel-00437770 https://tel.archives-ouvertes.fr/tel-00437770 https://tel.archives-ouvertes.fr/tel-00437770/document https://tel.archives-ouvertes.fr/tel-00437770/file/thesedhuime.pdf | Partager |
![]() | Orogenic, ophiolitic and abyssal peridotites Auteur(s) : Bodinier, Jean-Louis Godard, Marguerite Auteurs secondaires : Géosciences Montpellier ; Université des Antilles et de la Guyane (UAG) - Institut national des sciences de l'Univers (INSU - CNRS) - Université de Montpellier (UM) - Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS) Éditeur(s) : HAL CCSD Elsevier Résumé : "Tectonically emplaced" mantle rocks include subcontinental, suboceanic, and subarc mantle rocks that were tectonically exhumed from the upper mantle and occur:(i) as dispersed ultramafic bodies, a few meters to kilometers in size, in suture zones and mountain belts (i.e., the "alpine," or "orogenic" peridotite massifs - De Roever (1957), Thayer (1960), Den Tex (1969));(ii) as the lower ultramafic section of large (tens of kilometers) ophiolite or island arc complexes, obducted on continental margins (e.g., the Oman Ophiolite and the Kohistan Arc Complex - Coleman (1971), Boudier and Coleman (1981), Burg et al. (1998));(iii) exhumed above the sea level in ocean basins (e.g., Zabargad Island in the Red Sea, St. Paul's islets in the Atlantic and Macquarie Island in the southwestern Pacific - Tilley (1947), Melson et al. (1967), Varne and Rubenach (1972), Bonatti et al. (1981)).The "abyssal peridotites" are samples from the oceanic mantle that were dredged on the ocean floor, or recovered from drill cores (e.g., Bonatti et al., 1974; Prinz et al., 1976; Hamlyn and Bonatti, 1980).Altogether, tectonically emplaced and abyssal mantle rocks provide insights into upper mantle compositions and processes that are complementary to the information conveyed by mantle xenoliths (See Chapter 2.05). They provide coverage to vast regions of the Earth's upper mantle that are sparsely sampled by mantle xenoliths, particularly in the ocean basins and beneath passive continental margins, back-arc basins, and oceanic island arcs.Compared with mantle xenoliths, a disadvantage of some tectonically emplaced mantle rocks for representing mantle compositions is that their original geodynamic setting is not exactly known and their significance is sometimes a subject of speculation. For instance, the provenance of orogenic lherzolite massifs (subcontinental lithosphere versus upwelling asthenosphere) is still debated (Menzies and Dupuy, 1991, and references herein), as is the original setting of ophiolites (mid-ocean ridges versus supra-subduction settings - e.g., Nicolas, 1989). In addition, the mantle structures and mineralogical compositions of tectonically emplaced mantle rocks may be obscured by deformation and metamorphic recrystallization during shallow upwelling, exhumation, and tectonic emplacement. Metamorphic processes range from high-temperature recrystallization in the stability field of plagioclase peridotites ( Rampone et al., 1993) to complete serpentinization (e.g., Burkhard and O'Neill, 1988). Some garnet peridotites record even more complex evolutions. They were first buried to, at least, the stability field of garnet peridotites, and, in some cases to greater than 150 km depths ( Dobrzhinetskaya et al., 1996; Green et al., 1997; Liou, 1999). Then, they were exhumed to the surface, dragged by buoyant crustal rocks ( Brueckner and Medaris, 2000).Alternatively, several peridotite massifs are sufficiently well preserved to allow the observation of structural relationships between mantle lithologies that are larger than the sampling scale of mantle xenoliths. It is possible in these massifs to evaluate the scale of mantle heterogeneities and the relative timing of mantle processes such as vein injection, melt-rock reaction, deformation, etc... Detailed studies of orogenic and ophiolitic peridotites on centimeter- to kilometer-scale provide invaluable insights into melt transfer mechanisms, such as melt flow in lithospheric vein conduits and wall-rock reactions (Bodinier et al., 1990), melt extraction from mantle sources via channeled porous flow ( Kelemen et al., 1995) or propagation of kilometer-scale melting fronts associated with thermalerosion of lithospheric mantle ( Lenoir et al., 2001). In contrast, mantle xenoliths may be used to infer either much smaller- or much larger-scale mantle heterogeneities, such as micro-inclusions in minerals ( Schiano and Clocchiatti, 1994) or lateral variations between lithospheric provinces ( O'Reilly et al., 2001).The abyssal peridotites are generally strongly affected by oceanic hydrothermal alteration. Most often, their whole-rock compositions are strongly modified and cannot be used straightforwardly to assess mantle compositions (e.g., Baker and Beckett, 1999). However, even in the worst cases the samples generally contain fresh, relic minerals (mainly clinopyroxene) that represent the only available direct information on the oceanic upper mantle in large ocean basins, away from hot-spot volcanic centers. In situ trace-element data on clinopyroxenes from abyssal peridotites provide constraints on melting processes at mid-ocean ridges (Johnson et al., 1990).In this chapter, we review the main inferences on upper mantle composition and heterogeneity that may be drawn from geochemical analyses of the major elements, lithophile trace elements, and Nd-Sr isotopes in tectonically emplaced and abyssal mantle rocks. In addition we emphasize important insights into the mechanisms of melt/fluid transfer that can be deduced from detailed studies of these mantle materials. Treatise on Geochemistry Update12.04 hal-00407944 https://hal.archives-ouvertes.fr/hal-00407944 DOI : 10.1016/B0-08-043751-6/02004-1 | Partager |