Petrology and geochemistry of early cretaceous bimodal continental flood volcanism of the NW Etendeka, Namibia. Part 2: Characteristics and petrogenesis of the high-Ti latite and high-Ti and low-Ti voluminous quartz latite eruptives


Autoria(s): Ewart, A.; Marsh, J.S.; Milner, S.C.; Duncan, A.R.; Kamber, B.S.; Armstrong, R.A.
Data(s)

01/01/2004

Resumo

As a result of their relative concentration towards the respective Atlantic margins, the silicic eruptives of the Parana (Brazil)-Etendeka large igneous province are disproportionately abundant in the Etendeka of Namibia. The NW Etendeka silicic units, dated at similar to132 Ma, occupy the upper stratigraphic levels of the volcanic sequences, restricted to the coastal zone, and comprise three latites and five quartz latites (QL). The large-volume Fria QL is the only low-Ti type. Its trace element and isotopic signatures indicate massive crustal input. The remaining NW Etendeka silicic units are enigmatic high-Ti types, geochemically different from low-Ti types. They exhibit chemical affinities with the temporally overlapping Khumib high-Ti basalt (see Ewart et al. Part 1) and high crystallization temperatures (greater than or equal to980 to 1120degreesC) inferred from augite and pigeonite phenocrysts, both consistent with their evolution from a mafic source. Geochemically, the high-Ti units define three groups, thought genetically related. We test whether these represent independent liquid lines of descent from a common high-Ti mafic parent. Although the recognition of latites reduces the apparent silica gap, difficulty is encountered in fractional crystallization models by the large volumes of two QL units. Numerical modelling does, however, support large-scale open-system fractional crystallization, assimilation of silicic to basaltic materials, and magma mixing, but cannot entirely exclude partial melting processes within the temporally active extensional environment. The fractional crystallization and mixing signatures add to the complexity of these enigmatic and controversial silicic magmas. The existence, however, of temporally and spatially overlapping high-Ti basalts is, in our view, not coincidental and the high-Ti character of the silicic magmas ultimately reflects a mantle signature.

Identificador

http://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:74040

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Oxford University Press

Palavras-Chave #Geochemistry & Geophysics #Large-volume Quartz Latites #Magma Mixing #Open-system Fractional Crystallization #Crustal Assimilation #High-ti And Low-ti Provinciality #Messum Igneous Complex #Oxygen Isotope Geochemistry #Goboboseb Mountains #Parana Rhyolites #Southern Brazil #Basalt Province #Magma Types #Mantle #Model #Stratigraphy #C1 #260300 Geochemistry
Tipo

Journal Article