4.6 Article

The Song Da magmatic suite revisited: A petrologic, geochemical and Sr-Nd isotopic study on picrites, flood basalts and silicic volcanic rocks

Journal

JOURNAL OF ASIAN EARTH SCIENCES
Volume 42, Issue 6, Pages 1341-1355

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.jseaes.2011.07.020

Keywords

Emeishan large igneous province; Flood basalt; Geochemistry; Silicic volcanic rocks; Sr-Nd isotopes; Vietnam

Funding

  1. National Science Council (NSC), Taiwan, ROC
  2. NSC
  3. VAST

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Permian volcanic rocks, including picrites, flood basalts and silicic volcanic rocks, crop out in the Song Da district, northern Vietnam. They occur as a similar to 300-km-long belt emanating from the southernmost part of the Emeishan large igneous province, SW China. The belt represents a detached part from the province and was displaced similar to 600 km southeastward along the Ailao Shan-Red River shear zone during the mid-Tertiary in response to the India-Eurasia collision. We report here geochemical and Sr-Nd isotopic data on the Song Da volcanic rocks to decipher the petrogenetic processes responsible for their formation. The picrites show evidence of olivine fractionation and formed from high-Mg magmas (MgO = 20-25 wt.%) originated from depleted mantle peridotites from the Emeishan plume head. The plume head is characterized by epsilon Nd(t) value of +8. Some picrites and low-Ti basalts have low Nb/La, Nb/U and epsilon Nd(t), which are indicative of plume-lithosphere interaction in various degrees. Contamination of continental crustal rocks (<20%) is able to produce the spectra of the observed trace element patterns and isotopic ratios. The silicic volcanic rocks are metaluminous or peraluminous (aluminium saturation index = 0.92-1.24) and are sufficiently different from those present elsewhere in the Emeishan large igneous province that are dominantly peralkaline. The Song Da silicic volcanic rocks have epsilon Nd(t) values of -0.1 to +0.6 and show strong depletion in compatible trace elements (e.g. Ni = 0.8-3 ppm, V = 4-55 ppm). They most likely formed by extensive fractional crystallization from the associated high-Ti basalts, possibly with some crustal contamination. (C) 2011 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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