Magma sources during Gondwana breakup: chemistry and chronology of Cretaceous magmatism in Westland, New Zealand

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Magma sources during Gondwana breakup: chemistry and chronology of Cretaceous magmatism in Westland, New Zealand. / van der Meer, Quinten Har Adriaan; Waight, Tod Earle; Scott, James M.

2013.

Publikation: KonferencebidragKonferenceabstrakt til konferenceForskning

Harvard

van der Meer, QHA, Waight, TE & Scott, JM 2013, 'Magma sources during Gondwana breakup: chemistry and chronology of Cretaceous magmatism in Westland, New Zealand'.

APA

van der Meer, Q. H. A., Waight, T. E., & Scott, J. M. (2013). Magma sources during Gondwana breakup: chemistry and chronology of Cretaceous magmatism in Westland, New Zealand.

Vancouver

van der Meer QHA, Waight TE, Scott JM. Magma sources during Gondwana breakup: chemistry and chronology of Cretaceous magmatism in Westland, New Zealand. 2013.

Author

van der Meer, Quinten Har Adriaan ; Waight, Tod Earle ; Scott, James M. / Magma sources during Gondwana breakup: chemistry and chronology of Cretaceous magmatism in Westland, New Zealand. 1 s.

Bibtex

@conference{9dc26ea3b97c41818899d821815193f0,
title = "Magma sources during Gondwana breakup: chemistry and chronology of Cretaceous magmatism in Westland, New Zealand",
abstract = "Cretaceous-Paleogene rifting of the Eastern Gondwana margin thinned the continental crust of Zealandia and culminated in the opening of the Tasman Sea between Australia and New Zealand and the Southern Ocean, separating both from Antarctica. The Western Province of New Zealand consists of a succession of metasedimentary rocks intruded by Palaeozoic and Mesozoic granitoids that formed in an active margin setting through the Phanerozoic. Upon cessation of subduction, the earliest stages of extension (110-100 Ma) were expressed in the formation of metamorphic core complexes, followed by emplacement of granitoid plutons, the deposition of terrestrial Pororari Group sediments in extensional half-grabens across on- and offshore Westland, and the intrusion of mafic dikes from 90 Ma. These dikes are concentrated in the swarms of the Paparoa and Hohonu Ranges and were intruded prior to and simultaneous with volumetrically minor A-type plutonism at 82 Ma. The emplacement of mafic dikesand A-type plutonism at 82 Ma is significant as it coincides with the age of the oldest seafloor in the Tasman Sea, therefore it represents magmatism coincident with the initiation of seafloor spreading which continued until 53 Ma. New 40Ar-39Ar ages indicate that the intrusion of mafic dikes in basement lithologies both preceded and continued after the initial opening of the Tasman Sea, including an additional population of ages at 70 Ma. This indicates either a prolonged period of extension-related magmatism that continued >10 Ma after initial breakup,or two discrete episodes of magmatism during Tasman Sea spreading.Volumetrically minor Cenozoic within-plate magmatism continued sporadically throughout the South Island and bears a characteristic HIMU (high time integrated U/Pb) signature. A detailed geochemistry and chronologicalstudy of Cretaceous mafic and felsic magmatism is currently in progress and aims to better understand the transition of magma sources from a long lived active continental margin through breakup to a passive setting, and to constrainthe onset and evolution of the chemical characteristics of the magmas and their sources, including the origin of the distinctive HIMU signatures.",
author = "{van der Meer}, {Quinten Har Adriaan} and Waight, {Tod Earle} and Scott, {James M.}",
note = "Geophysical Research Abstracts Vol. 15, EGU2013-3141-1, 2013, EGU General Assembly 2013",
year = "2013",
language = "English",

}

RIS

TY - ABST

T1 - Magma sources during Gondwana breakup: chemistry and chronology of Cretaceous magmatism in Westland, New Zealand

AU - van der Meer, Quinten Har Adriaan

AU - Waight, Tod Earle

AU - Scott, James M.

N1 - Geophysical Research Abstracts Vol. 15, EGU2013-3141-1, 2013, EGU General Assembly 2013

PY - 2013

Y1 - 2013

N2 - Cretaceous-Paleogene rifting of the Eastern Gondwana margin thinned the continental crust of Zealandia and culminated in the opening of the Tasman Sea between Australia and New Zealand and the Southern Ocean, separating both from Antarctica. The Western Province of New Zealand consists of a succession of metasedimentary rocks intruded by Palaeozoic and Mesozoic granitoids that formed in an active margin setting through the Phanerozoic. Upon cessation of subduction, the earliest stages of extension (110-100 Ma) were expressed in the formation of metamorphic core complexes, followed by emplacement of granitoid plutons, the deposition of terrestrial Pororari Group sediments in extensional half-grabens across on- and offshore Westland, and the intrusion of mafic dikes from 90 Ma. These dikes are concentrated in the swarms of the Paparoa and Hohonu Ranges and were intruded prior to and simultaneous with volumetrically minor A-type plutonism at 82 Ma. The emplacement of mafic dikesand A-type plutonism at 82 Ma is significant as it coincides with the age of the oldest seafloor in the Tasman Sea, therefore it represents magmatism coincident with the initiation of seafloor spreading which continued until 53 Ma. New 40Ar-39Ar ages indicate that the intrusion of mafic dikes in basement lithologies both preceded and continued after the initial opening of the Tasman Sea, including an additional population of ages at 70 Ma. This indicates either a prolonged period of extension-related magmatism that continued >10 Ma after initial breakup,or two discrete episodes of magmatism during Tasman Sea spreading.Volumetrically minor Cenozoic within-plate magmatism continued sporadically throughout the South Island and bears a characteristic HIMU (high time integrated U/Pb) signature. A detailed geochemistry and chronologicalstudy of Cretaceous mafic and felsic magmatism is currently in progress and aims to better understand the transition of magma sources from a long lived active continental margin through breakup to a passive setting, and to constrainthe onset and evolution of the chemical characteristics of the magmas and their sources, including the origin of the distinctive HIMU signatures.

AB - Cretaceous-Paleogene rifting of the Eastern Gondwana margin thinned the continental crust of Zealandia and culminated in the opening of the Tasman Sea between Australia and New Zealand and the Southern Ocean, separating both from Antarctica. The Western Province of New Zealand consists of a succession of metasedimentary rocks intruded by Palaeozoic and Mesozoic granitoids that formed in an active margin setting through the Phanerozoic. Upon cessation of subduction, the earliest stages of extension (110-100 Ma) were expressed in the formation of metamorphic core complexes, followed by emplacement of granitoid plutons, the deposition of terrestrial Pororari Group sediments in extensional half-grabens across on- and offshore Westland, and the intrusion of mafic dikes from 90 Ma. These dikes are concentrated in the swarms of the Paparoa and Hohonu Ranges and were intruded prior to and simultaneous with volumetrically minor A-type plutonism at 82 Ma. The emplacement of mafic dikesand A-type plutonism at 82 Ma is significant as it coincides with the age of the oldest seafloor in the Tasman Sea, therefore it represents magmatism coincident with the initiation of seafloor spreading which continued until 53 Ma. New 40Ar-39Ar ages indicate that the intrusion of mafic dikes in basement lithologies both preceded and continued after the initial opening of the Tasman Sea, including an additional population of ages at 70 Ma. This indicates either a prolonged period of extension-related magmatism that continued >10 Ma after initial breakup,or two discrete episodes of magmatism during Tasman Sea spreading.Volumetrically minor Cenozoic within-plate magmatism continued sporadically throughout the South Island and bears a characteristic HIMU (high time integrated U/Pb) signature. A detailed geochemistry and chronologicalstudy of Cretaceous mafic and felsic magmatism is currently in progress and aims to better understand the transition of magma sources from a long lived active continental margin through breakup to a passive setting, and to constrainthe onset and evolution of the chemical characteristics of the magmas and their sources, including the origin of the distinctive HIMU signatures.

M3 - Conference abstract for conference

ER -

ID: 45032300