4.6 Article

Hydrothermal alteration and melting of the crust during the Columbia River Basalt-Snake River Plain transition and the origin of low-δ18O rhyolites of the central Snake River Plain

Journal

LITHOS
Volume 224, Issue -, Pages 310-323

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.lithos.2015.02.022

Keywords

Isotopes; Snake River Plain; Zircon; Rhyolite; Hydrothermal alteration

Funding

  1. NSF [EAR/CAREER0844772]
  2. Instrumentation and Facilities Program, Division of Earth Sdences, National Science Foundation. [1029193]
  3. Directorate For Geosciences
  4. Division Of Earth Sciences [1029193, 0844772] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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We present compelling isotopic evidence from similar to 15 Ma rhyolites that erupted coeval with the Columbia River Basalts in southwest Idaho's J-P Desert and the Jarbidge Mountains of northern Nevada at that suggests that the Yellowstone mantle plume caused hydrothermal alteration and remelting of diverse compositions of shallow crust in the area where they erupted. These rhyolites also constitute the earliest known Miocene volcanism in the vicinity of the Bruneau-Jarbidge and Twin Falls (BJTF) volcanic complexes, a major center of voluminous (10(3) - 10(4) km(3)) low-delta O-18 rhyolitic volcanism that was previously defined as being active from 13 to 6 Ma. The Jarbidge Rhyolite has above-mantle delta O-18 (delta O-18 of +7.9 parts per thousand SMOW) and extremely unradiogenic epsilon(Hf) (-34.7) and epsilon(Nd) (-24.0). By contrast, the J-P Desert units are lower in delta O-18 (+4.5 to 5.8 parts per thousand), and have more moderately unradiogenic whole-rock epsilon(Hf) (-20.3 to -8.9) and epsilon(Nd) (-13.4 to 7.7). The J-P Desert rhyolites are geochemically and petrologically similar to the younger rhyolites of the BJTF center (the one exception being their high 8180 values), suggesting a common origin for J-P Desert and BJTF rhyolites. The presence of low-delta O-18 values and unradiogenic Nd and Hf isotopic compositions, both of which differ greatly from the composition of a mantle differentiate, indicate that some of these melts may be 50% or more melted crust by volume. Individual J-P Desert units have isotopically diverse zircons, with one lava containing zircons ranging from -0.6 parts per thousand to + 6.5 parts per thousand in delta O-18 and from -29.5 to -2.8 in epsilon(Hf). Despite this diversity, zircons all have Miocene U/Pb ages. The range of zircon compositions fingerprints the diversity of their source melts, which in turn allow us to determine the compositions of two crustal end-members which melted to form these rhyolites. These end-members are: 1) Archean basement with normal to high-delta O-18 and unradiogenic epsilon(Hf) and 2) hydrothermally altered, shallow, young crust with low-delta O-18 (0-1 parts per thousand.) and more radiogenic epsilon(Hf). We suggest that the shallow crust's low-delta O-18 composition is the result of hydrothermal alteration which was driven by a combination of normal faulting and high heat fluxes from intruding Yellowstone plume-derived basalts shortly prior to the onset of silicic magmatism. Furthermore, zircon diversity in the J-P Desert units suggests rapid assembly of zircon-bearing melts of varying isotopic composition prior to eruption, creating well-mixed magmas with heterogeneous zircons, We suggest that this hydrothermal priming of the crust followed by remelting upon further heating may be a common feature of intraplate mantle plume volcanism worldwide. (C) 2015 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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