4.7 Article

Episodicity within a mid-Cretaceous magmatic flare-up in West Antarctica: U-Pb ages of the Lassiter Coast intrusive suite, Antarctic Peninsula, and correlations along the Gondwana margin

Journal

GEOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF AMERICA BULLETIN
Volume 130, Issue 7-8, Pages 1177-1196

Publisher

GEOLOGICAL SOC AMER, INC
DOI: 10.1130/B31800.1

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Natural Environmental Research Council
  2. NERC [bas0100029] Funding Source: UKRI

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Long-lived continental margin arcs are characterized by episodes of large- volume magmatism (or flare-ups) that can persist for similar to 30 m.y. before steady-state arc conditions resume. Flare-up events are characterized by the emplacement of large-volume granodio- rite-tonalite batholiths and sometimes asso- ciated rhyodacitic ignimbrites. One of the major flare-up events of the West Gondwana margin occurred during the mid-Cretaceous and was temporally and spatially associated with widespread deformation and Pacific plate reorganization. New U-Pb geochronology from the Lassiter Coast intrusive suite in the southern Antarctic Peninsula identifies a major magmatic event in the interval 130-102 Ma that was characterized by three distinct peaks in granitoid emplacement at 130-126 Ma, 118-113 Ma, and 108-102 Ma, with clear lulls in between. Mid-Cretaceous magmatism from elsewhere in West Ant- arctica, Patagonia, and New Zealand also featured marked episodicity during the mid-Cretaceous and recorded remarkable con- tinuity along the West Gondwana margin. The three distinct magmatic events represent second-order episodicity relative to the primary episodicity that occurred on a cordillera scale and is a feature of the North and South American Pacific margin. Flare-up events require the development of a highly fusible, lower-crustal layer resulting from the continued underplating of hydrous mineralogies in the melt-fertile lower crust as a result of long-lived subduction. However, the actual trigger for melting is likely to result from external, potentially tectonic factors, e.g., rifting, plate reorganization, continental breakup, or mantle plumes.

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