958 resultados para extension, Alboran Sea, subduction rollback, Aegean Sea, high-pressure metamorphism
Resumo:
Variations in the strength of coastal upwelling in the South East Atlantic Ocean and summer monsoonal rains over South Africa are controlled by the regional atmospheric circulation regime. Although information about these parameters exists for the last glacial period, little detailed information exists for older time periods. New information from ODP Site 1085 for Marine Isotope Stages (MIS) 12-10 shows that glacial-interglacial productivity trends linked to upwelling variability followed a pattern similar to the last glacial cycle, with maximums shortly before glacial maxima, and minimums shortly before glacial terminations. During the MIS-11/10 transition, several periodic oscillations in productivity and monsoonal proxies are best explained by southwards shifts in the southern sub-tropical high-pressure cells followed by abrupt northwards shifts. Comparison to coeval sea-surface temperature measurements suggests that these monsoonal cycles were tightly coupled to anti-phased hemispheric climate change, with an intensified summer monsoon during periods of Northern (Southern) Hemisphere cooling (warming). The timing of these events suggests a pacing by insolation over precession periods. A lack of similar regional circulation shifts during the MIS-13/12 transition is likely due to the large equatorwards shift in the tropical convection zone that occurred during this extreme glaciation.
Resumo:
The majority of the basalts drilled on Leg 65 in the Gulf of California are aphyric to sparsely phyric massive flows ranging in average thickness between 5 meters in the upper part of the sections in Holes 483 and 483B, where they are interlayered with sediment, and 14 meters in Hole 485A, where interlayered sediments constitute more than half of the section. Massive flows interlayered with pillows are generally less than 4 meters thick. The pillow lavas recovered are more phyric (up to 15 modal%) and contain two to three generations of plagioclase and olivine ± clinopyroxene. Plagioclase generally exceeds 60% of any given phenocryst assemblage. Resorbed olivine, clinopyroxene, and plagioclase megacrysts may reflect a high-pressure stage, the phenocrysts crystallizing in the main magma chamber and the skeletal microphenocrysts in dikes. Precise measurements of length/width ratios of different phenocryst types and compositions show low aspect ratios and large crystal volumes for early crystals and high ratios and low volumes for late crystals grown under strong undercooling conditions. The minerals examined show wide ranges in composition: in particular, plagioclase ranges from An92 to An36; clinopyroxene ranges from Ca41Mg51Fe8 in the cores of phenocrysts to Ca40**36 Mg45**49Fe15**20 in the groundmass; and olivine ranges from Fo86 to Fo81. The wide range in mineral compositions, together with evidence of disequilibrium based on textures and comparisons of glass and mineral compositions, indicate complex crystallization histories involving both polybaric crystal fractionation and magma mixing.
Resumo:
Basaltic rocks recovered at the Middle America Trench area off Mexico are typical plagioclase-olivine phyric abyssal tholeiites containing less than 0.2 wt.% K2O. Phenocrysts of plagioclase and olivine usually make up the aggregate. Plagioclase phenocrysts are Ca-rich and up to An90. Olivine phenocrysts, which are always attached to plagioclase phenocrysts, are magnesian, Fo88 to Fo89, and contain 0.2 to 0.3 wt. % of NiO. Plagioclase phenocrysts contain numerous glass inclusions with the Mg/Mg+Fe atomic ratio of 0.70 to 0.73, which is distinctly higher than the same ratio of the bulk rock (0.62-0.63). Olivine of Fo88 to Fo89 is equilibrated with the liquid with an Mg/Mg+Fe atomic ratio of about 0.7, assuming the KDMg-Fe between liquid and olivine of 0.3. Small droplets of glass within glass inclusions in plagioclase are more enriched in K2O and volatiles than the host glass. This enrichment may have been caused by the extraction of Al2O3 as plagioclase from the trapped liquid and implies its immiscibility. Aggregates of plagioclase with small amounts of olivine may have been floated from more primitive magma with an Mg/Mg+Fe atomic ratio of about 0.7, judging from the chemical characteristics mentioned above. Flotation must have occurred at relatively high pressure. Large crystals of plagioclase and smaller crystals of olivine are xenocryst rather than phenocryst. Parental magma of Leg 66 basalt was high-MgO olivine tholeiite.