A geochemical approach to allochthonous terranes: a Pan-African case study

The recognition of Mesozoic and Cenozoic terranes can best be made from palaeomagnetic, structural and palaeontological studies, but older regions of continental crust require geochemical constraints to evaluate crustal growth through terrane accretion. For Precambrian shields, the pattern of Pb and Nd isotopic provinces may reveal the mechanism of crustal growth. The Afro-Arabian Shield was generated by calc-alkaline magmatism between 900 and 600 Ma ago. This example of Pan-African crustal growth underlies an area of at least 1.2 x 10 6 km 2 , which may extend to 3.5 x 10 6 km 2 beneath Phanerozoic sediments and Tertiary volcanic cover. Field evidence and trace element geochemistry suggest that Pan-African tectonics began as a series of intra-oceanic island arcs that were accreted to form continental lithosphere over a period of 300 Ma. The great majority of Nd and Pb isotope ratios obtained for igneous rocks from the shield are indicative of a mantle magma source. Although many of the dismembered ophiolites cannot be identified with inter-terrane sutures in their present location, the eastern margin of the Nabitah orogenic belt is a major tectonic break that coincides with a critical boundary between Nd and Pb isotopic provinces and is marked by a linear array of ophiolite fragments across the length of the shield. Other terrane boundaries have not been identified conclusively, both because coeval island arcs can not be distinguished readily on isotopic grounds and because many ophiolites are allochthonous. However, the calculated rates of crustal growth (measured as volume of magma, extracted from the mantle per unit time) between 900 and 600 Ma are similar to those calculated for Phanerozoic terranes from the Canadian Cordillera. Such high rates in the Afro-Arabian Shield suggest that island arc terranes have accreted along a continental margin now exposed in NE Africa, together with minor continental fragments. If crustal growth rates during this time were no greater than contemporary rates, ca . 4000 km of arc length are required, which is considerably less than that responsible for crustal growth in the SW Pacific.

2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (04) ◽  
pp. 307-328
Author(s):  
Alexis Hamdja Ngoniri ◽  
Habib Dadjo Djomo ◽  
Timoleon Ngnotue ◽  
Patrick Ayonta Kenne ◽  
Ghislain Ngassam Mbianya ◽  
...  

The oceanic island arcs should represent the least complicated type of subduction related magmatism. Theoretically they represent an environment in which contamination by continental crustal materials does not occur. Basaltic lavas from most island arc systems have Sr, Nd and Pb isotope characteristics that do not deviate substantially from the normal arrays of mantle derived magmas. However, their distinctive trace element geochemistry requires a distinctive mantle source composition which is most readily achieved by metasomatism of the lherzolite of the mantle wedge by fluids ascending from the upper surface of the subducted slab. Such fluids may be variably enriched in 87 S r/ 86 Sr, in which case they will induce deviations from the Nd-Sr mantle array. In marked contrast, a range of basic to intermediate lavas from the Sunda-Banda arc of Indonesia and the Lesser Antilles island arc have a significant continental fingerprint to their isotopic compositions and show marked deviations from the Sr-Nd and Pb isotope mantle arrays. These data could be explained by the involvement of a terrigenous sedimentary component in the genesis of the slab derived fluids. However, they could equally reflect high level contamination of the ascending magmas by sediments in situ at the base of the island arc crust.


Geology ◽  
1996 ◽  
Vol 24 (11) ◽  
pp. 1055 ◽  
Author(s):  
Peter R. Johnson ◽  
I. C. F. Stewart ◽  
Martin J. Whitehouse ◽  
Brian F. Windley ◽  
Mahfood A. O. Ba-Bttat

Minerals ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 10 (9) ◽  
pp. 770
Author(s):  
Guishan Zhang ◽  
Ren Peng ◽  
Hongxin Qiu ◽  
Hanjie Wen ◽  
Yonggang Feng ◽  
...  

Cenozoic alkali basalts in Southeast (SE) China generally are genetically related to intracontinental rifting. Hence, they can be used to probe the nature of their underlying mantle sources and aid studies of the tectonic background in this region. This paper focuses on the Shanhoujian alkali basalts located in Bailing County, northeastern Fujian, SE China. We herein report their petrology, whole-rock major, and trace element geochemistry, and Sr-Nd isotopic composition and provide a new zircon U-Pb age for the basalts (~40 Ma, Eocene). These data help to constrain the petrogenesis of alkali basalts, their mantle source, and tectonic settings. The basalts are characterized by high Mg# (58.21–63.52) with Na2O/K2O > 1. MgO content is weakly correlated with CaO and Cr content but shows no correlation with Ni and Fe2O3 (total). Such features suggest that fractionation of clinopyroxene rather than olivine was important. In terms of trace elements, the alkali basalts display: (1) enrichment in La, Ce, Rb, Ba, Nb, and Ta and depletion in K, Pb, Zr, Hf, and Ti and (2) notable fractionation of light rare earth elements from heavy rare earth elements. Determined (87Sr/86Sr)i is in the range of 0.7041–0.7040 and εNd (t) is between +3.2 and +3.3. The Shanhoujian alkali basalts show a notable affinity to oceanic island basalts (OIBs) with little assimilation of crustal materials. They were derived from a pyroxenite and carbonated peridotite mantle source metasomatized by sediments carried by the subduction plate at different depths. The primary magmas of these basalts were derived from partial melting of this metasomatized mantle source during upwelling of the asthenospheric mantle as an intracontinental rift formed through extension in this part of SE China.


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