Geochemistry of Archean anorthosite-bearing layered intrusions

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Geochemistry of Archean anorthosite-bearing layered intrusions. / Sotiriou, Paul; Polat, Ali; Kusky, Tim; Windley, Brian F.; Frei, Robert; Yang, Xue-Ming.

I: Earth-Science Reviews, Bind 249, 104654, 2024.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Sotiriou, P, Polat, A, Kusky, T, Windley, BF, Frei, R & Yang, X-M 2024, 'Geochemistry of Archean anorthosite-bearing layered intrusions', Earth-Science Reviews, bind 249, 104654. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.earscirev.2023.104654

APA

Sotiriou, P., Polat, A., Kusky, T., Windley, B. F., Frei, R., & Yang, X-M. (2024). Geochemistry of Archean anorthosite-bearing layered intrusions. Earth-Science Reviews, 249, [104654]. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.earscirev.2023.104654

Vancouver

Sotiriou P, Polat A, Kusky T, Windley BF, Frei R, Yang X-M. Geochemistry of Archean anorthosite-bearing layered intrusions. Earth-Science Reviews. 2024;249. 104654. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.earscirev.2023.104654

Author

Sotiriou, Paul ; Polat, Ali ; Kusky, Tim ; Windley, Brian F. ; Frei, Robert ; Yang, Xue-Ming. / Geochemistry of Archean anorthosite-bearing layered intrusions. I: Earth-Science Reviews. 2024 ; Bind 249.

Bibtex

@article{b5d22b85683247c793ebda66bac9eede,
title = "Geochemistry of Archean anorthosite-bearing layered intrusions",
abstract = "The geochemistry of Archean anorthosite-bearing layered intrusions has major implications for the thermal and chemical state of the Archean crust/mantle system, as originally posited by Bowen (1917) as “the anorthosite problem” and expanded on by Ashwal (1993). Debates have centred on the nature of the parental magmas, emplacement mechanisms and geodynamic settings of Archean anorthosites, many of which have megacrystic textures. In this review, we have compiled whole-rock major and trace element and Nd isotope geochemical data from Archean anorthosite-bearing layered intrusions worldwide to address the outstanding questions outlined above regarding the petrogenesis of anorthosites. Archean anorthosite-bearing layered intrusions were not significantly affected by hydrothermal alteration and were derived from depleted mantle sources and most (85%) were emplaced in oceanic settings. Some intrusions were intruded in continental settings or ocean-continent transition zones, reflecting the emergence of continents in the Paleoarchean into the Neoarchean. Based on their petrography and major and trace element geochemistry, Archean anorthosite-bearing layered intrusions mostly crystallised from hydrous Ca- and Al-rich tholeiitic magmas that fractionated from more primitive tholeiitic parental magmas. Archean layered intrusions formed by shallow- and deep-level fractional crystallisation of tholeiitic magmas and predominantly formed in back-arc suprasubduction zone and volcanic arc settings. Archean anorthosite-bearing layered intrusions started forming at ca. 3850 Ma, most of them representing relicts of dismembered Archean subduction-related ophiolites. Modern-style plate tectonic processes have operated at least since the earliest Archean and were the predominant contributor to Archean crustal growth.",
author = "Paul Sotiriou and Ali Polat and Tim Kusky and Windley, {Brian F.} and Robert Frei and Xue-Ming Yang",
year = "2024",
doi = "10.1016/j.earscirev.2023.104654",
language = "English",
volume = "249",
journal = "Earth-Science Reviews",
issn = "0012-8252",
publisher = "Elsevier",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Geochemistry of Archean anorthosite-bearing layered intrusions

AU - Sotiriou, Paul

AU - Polat, Ali

AU - Kusky, Tim

AU - Windley, Brian F.

AU - Frei, Robert

AU - Yang, Xue-Ming

PY - 2024

Y1 - 2024

N2 - The geochemistry of Archean anorthosite-bearing layered intrusions has major implications for the thermal and chemical state of the Archean crust/mantle system, as originally posited by Bowen (1917) as “the anorthosite problem” and expanded on by Ashwal (1993). Debates have centred on the nature of the parental magmas, emplacement mechanisms and geodynamic settings of Archean anorthosites, many of which have megacrystic textures. In this review, we have compiled whole-rock major and trace element and Nd isotope geochemical data from Archean anorthosite-bearing layered intrusions worldwide to address the outstanding questions outlined above regarding the petrogenesis of anorthosites. Archean anorthosite-bearing layered intrusions were not significantly affected by hydrothermal alteration and were derived from depleted mantle sources and most (85%) were emplaced in oceanic settings. Some intrusions were intruded in continental settings or ocean-continent transition zones, reflecting the emergence of continents in the Paleoarchean into the Neoarchean. Based on their petrography and major and trace element geochemistry, Archean anorthosite-bearing layered intrusions mostly crystallised from hydrous Ca- and Al-rich tholeiitic magmas that fractionated from more primitive tholeiitic parental magmas. Archean layered intrusions formed by shallow- and deep-level fractional crystallisation of tholeiitic magmas and predominantly formed in back-arc suprasubduction zone and volcanic arc settings. Archean anorthosite-bearing layered intrusions started forming at ca. 3850 Ma, most of them representing relicts of dismembered Archean subduction-related ophiolites. Modern-style plate tectonic processes have operated at least since the earliest Archean and were the predominant contributor to Archean crustal growth.

AB - The geochemistry of Archean anorthosite-bearing layered intrusions has major implications for the thermal and chemical state of the Archean crust/mantle system, as originally posited by Bowen (1917) as “the anorthosite problem” and expanded on by Ashwal (1993). Debates have centred on the nature of the parental magmas, emplacement mechanisms and geodynamic settings of Archean anorthosites, many of which have megacrystic textures. In this review, we have compiled whole-rock major and trace element and Nd isotope geochemical data from Archean anorthosite-bearing layered intrusions worldwide to address the outstanding questions outlined above regarding the petrogenesis of anorthosites. Archean anorthosite-bearing layered intrusions were not significantly affected by hydrothermal alteration and were derived from depleted mantle sources and most (85%) were emplaced in oceanic settings. Some intrusions were intruded in continental settings or ocean-continent transition zones, reflecting the emergence of continents in the Paleoarchean into the Neoarchean. Based on their petrography and major and trace element geochemistry, Archean anorthosite-bearing layered intrusions mostly crystallised from hydrous Ca- and Al-rich tholeiitic magmas that fractionated from more primitive tholeiitic parental magmas. Archean layered intrusions formed by shallow- and deep-level fractional crystallisation of tholeiitic magmas and predominantly formed in back-arc suprasubduction zone and volcanic arc settings. Archean anorthosite-bearing layered intrusions started forming at ca. 3850 Ma, most of them representing relicts of dismembered Archean subduction-related ophiolites. Modern-style plate tectonic processes have operated at least since the earliest Archean and were the predominant contributor to Archean crustal growth.

U2 - 10.1016/j.earscirev.2023.104654

DO - 10.1016/j.earscirev.2023.104654

M3 - Journal article

VL - 249

JO - Earth-Science Reviews

JF - Earth-Science Reviews

SN - 0012-8252

M1 - 104654

ER -

ID: 377054554