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  • 1
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    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: John, Barbara E; Foster, David A; Murphy, John M; Cheadle, Michael J; Baines, A Graham; Fanning, C Mark; Copeland, Peter (2004): Determining the cooling history of in situ lower oceanic crust-Atlantis Bank, SW Indian Ridge. Earth and Planetary Science Letters, 222(1), 145-160, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.epsl.2004.02.014
    Publication Date: 2024-01-09
    Description: The cooling history and therefore thermal structure of oceanic lithosphere in slow-spreading environments is, to date, poorly constrained. Application of thermochronometric techniques to rocks from the very slow spreading SW Indian Ridge provide for the first time a direct measure of the age and thermal history of in situ lower oceanic crust. Crystallization of felsic veins (~850°C) drilled in Hole 735B is estimated at 11.93F0.14 Ma, based on U-Pb analyses of zircon by ion probe. This crystallization age is older than the 'crustal age' from remanence inferred from both sea surface and near-bottom magnetic anomaly data gathered over Hole 735B which indicate magnetization between major normal polarity chrons C5n.2n and C5An.1n (10.949-11.935 Ma). 40Ar/39Ar analyses of biotite give plateau ages between 11 and 12 Ma (mean 11.42 +/- 0.21 Ma), implying cooling rates of 〉800°C/m.y. over the first 500,00 years to temperatures below ~330-400°C. Fission-track ages on zircon (mean 9.35 +/- 1.2 Ma) and apatite reveal less rapid cooling to 〈110°C by ~7 Ma, some 4-5 m.y. off axis. Comprehensive thermochronometric data from the structurally intact block of gabbro between ~700 and 1100 m below sea floor suggest that crust traversed by ODP Hole 735B mimics conductive cooling over the temperature range ~ 900-330°C, characteristic of a 2-D plate-cooling model for oceanic lithosphere. In contrast, lower temperature chronometers (fission track on zircon, titanite, and apatite; T〈=280°C) are not consistent with these predictions and record anomalously high temperatures for crust 〉700 m below sea floor at 8-10 Ma (i.e. 2-4 m.y. off axis). We offer two hypotheses for this thermal anomaly: (i) Off-axis (or asymmetric) magmatism that caused anomalous reheating of the crust preserved in Hole 735B. This postulated magmatic event might be a consequence of the transtension, which affected the Atlantis II transform from ~19.5 to 7.5 Ma. (ii) Late detachment faulting, which led to significant crustal denudation (2.5-3 km removed), further from the ridge axis than conventionally thought.
    Keywords: 176-735B; DRILL; Drilling/drill rig; Indian Ocean; Joides Resolution; Leg176; Ocean Drilling Program; ODP
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 3 datasets
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2024-01-09
    Keywords: 176-735B; AGE; Age, standard deviation; DRILL; Drilling/drill rig; Indian Ocean; Ion probe analysis; Joides Resolution; Lead; Lead-204/Lead-206 ratio; Lead-206/Uranium-238, error; Lead-206/Uranium-238 ratio; Lead-207/Lead-206, standard error; Lead-207/Lead-206 ratio; Leg176; Ocean Drilling Program; ODP; Sample comment; Thorium; Thorium/Uranium ratio; Uranium; Uranium-238/Lead-206, standard error; Uranium-238/Lead-206 ratio
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 209 data points
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2024-01-09
    Keywords: -; 176-735B; AGE; Age, standard deviation; Argon-36/Argon-39; Argon-37/Argon-39; Argon-38/Argon-39; Argon-39; Argon-40; Argon-40/Argon-39; DRILL; Drilling/drill rig; Indian Ocean; Joides Resolution; Leg176; Ocean Drilling Program; ODP; Sample comment; Temperature, technical
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 432 data points
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2024-01-09
    Keywords: 176-735B; AGE; Age, standard deviation; DRILL; Drilling/drill rig; Fission-tracks, density, counted in stan; Fission-tracks, induced, density; Fission-tracks, spontaneous, density; Grains, counted/analyzed; Indian Ocean; Joides Resolution; Leg176; Mineral name; Number; Number of observations; Ocean Drilling Program; ODP; Probability, chi-square test; Uranium
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 156 data points
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  • 5
    Electronic Resource
    Electronic Resource
    Springer
    Contributions to mineralogy and petrology 133 (1998), S. 356-372 
    ISSN: 1432-0967
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Geosciences
    Notes: Abstract Corundums from basalt fields, particularly in Australia and Asia, include a dominant blue-green-yellow zoned “magmatic” suite (BGY suite) and subsidiary vari-coloured “metamorphic” suites. The BGY corundums have distinctive trace element contents (up to 0.04 wt% Ga2O3 and low Cr/Ga and Ti/Ga ratios 〈1). Different melt origins for BGY corundums are considered here from their inclusion and intergrowth mineralogy, petrologic associations and tectonic setting. Analysed primary inclusion minerals (over 100 inclusions) cover typical feldspars, zircon and Nb-Ta oxides and also include hercynite-magnetite, gahnospinel, rutile-ilmenite solid solution, calcic plagioclase, Ni-rich pyrrhotite, thorite and low-Si and Fe-rich glassy inclusions. This widens a previous inclusion survey; New England, East Australia corundums contain the most diverse inclusion suite known from basalt fields (20 phases). Zircon inclusion, intergrowth and megacryst rare earth element data show similar patterns, except for Eu which shows variable depletion. Temperature estimates from magnetite exsolution, feldspar compositions and fluid inclusion homogenization suggest that some corundums crystallized between 685–900 °C. Overlap of inclusion Nb, Ta oxide compositions with new comparative data from niobium-yttrium-fluorine enriched granitic pegmatites favour a silicate melt origin for the corundums. The feasibility of crystallizing corundum from low-volume initial melting of amphibole-bearing mantle assemblages was tested using the MELTS program on amphibole-pyroxenite xenolith chemistry from basalts. Corundum appears in the calculations at 720–880 °C and 0.7–1.1 GPa with residual feldspathic assemblages that match mineral compositions found in corundums and their related xenoliths. A model that generates melts from amphibole-bearing lithospheric mantle during magmatic plume activity is proposed for BGY corundum formation.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2012-09-01
    Description: A pod of monazite-xenotime gneiss (MXG) occurs within Mesoproterozoic paragneiss, Hudson Highlands, New York. This outcrop also contains granite of the Crystal Lake pluton, which migmatized the paragneiss. Previously, monazite, xenotime, and zircon from MXG, plus detrital zircon from the paragneiss, and igneous zircon from the granite, were dated using multi-grain thermal ionization mass spectrometry (TIMS). New SEM imagery of dated samples reveals that all minerals contain cores and rims. Thus TIMS analyses comprise mixtures of age components and are geologically meaningless. New spot analyses by sensitive high resolution ion microprobe (SHRIMP) of small homogeneous areas on individual grains allows deconvolution of ages within complexly zoned grains.Xenotime cores from MXG formed during two episodes (1034 ± 10 and 1014 ± 3 Ma), whereas three episodes of rim formation are recorded (999 ± 7, 961 ± 11, and 874 ± 11 Ma). Monazite cores from MXG mostly formed at 1004 ± 4 Ma; rims formed at 994 ± 4, 913 ± 7, and 890 ± 7 Ma. Zircon from MXG is composed of oscillatory-zoned detrital cores (2000-1170 Ma), plus metamorphic rims (1008 ± 7, 985 ± 5, and ∼950 Ma). In addition, MXG contains an unusual zircon population composed of irregularly-zoned elongate cores dated at 1036 ± 5 Ma, considered to be the time of formation of MXG. The time of granite emplacement is dated by oscillatory-zoned igneous cores at 1058 ± 4 Ma, which provides a minimum age constraint for the time of deposition of the paragneiss.Selected trace elements, including all REE plus U and Th, provide geochemical evidence for the origin of MXG. MREE-enriched xenotime from MXG are dissimilar from typical HREE-enriched patterns of igneous xenotime. The presence of large negative Eu anomalies and high U and Th in monazite and xenotime are uncharacteristic of typical ore-forming hydrothermal processes. We conclude that MXG is the result of unusual metasomatic processes during high grade metamorphism that was initiated at about 1035 Ma. This rock was then subjected to repeated episodes of dissolution/reprecipitation for about 150 m.y. during regional cooling of the Hudson Highlands.
    Print ISSN: 0002-9599
    Electronic ISSN: 1945-452X
    Topics: Geosciences
    Published by HighWire Press on behalf of The American Journal of Science.
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2011-05-01
    Description: The Fish Creek-Vallecito basin contains a 5.5-km-thick section of late Miocene to early Pleistocene sedimentary rocks exposed in the hanging wall of the West Salton detachment fault. These deposits preserve a high-fidelity record of late Cenozoic subsidence and basin filling that resulted from deformation in the San Andreas fault system of southern California. Existing and new paleomagnetic data, combined with new U-Pb zircon ages of two tuffs high in the section, show that the section ranges in age from ca. 8.0 {+/-} 0.4 Ma at the base to ca. 0.95 Ma at the top. Geohistory analysis reveals: (1) moderate subsidence (0.46 mm/yr) from ca. 8.0 to 4.5 Ma; (2) rapid subsidence (2.1 mm/yr) from 4.5 to 3.1 Ma; (3) moderate subsidence (0.40 mm/yr) from 3.1 to 0.95 Ma; and (4) rapid uplift and erosion that has exhumed the section since ca. 1 Ma. Onset of sedimentation at ca. 8.0 {+/-} 0.4 Ma records earliest extension or transtension in the area, possibly related to localization of the Pacific-North America plate boundary in the Salton Trough and Gulf of California. Alternatively, marine incursion at 6.3 Ma may be the earliest record of plate-boundary deformation in the Gulf of California-Salton Trough region. A thick interval higher in the section records progradation of the Colorado River delta into and across the basin starting ca. 4.9 Ma. Progradation continued during an abrupt increase in subsidence rate at 4.5 Ma, and fluvial-deltaic conditions persisted for 1.4 m.y. during the rapid-subsidence phase, indicating that delta progradation was driven by a large increase in rate of sediment input from the Colorado River. Uplift and inversion of the basin starting ca. 1.0 Ma record initiation of strike-slip faults that define the modern phase of dextral wrench tectonics in the western Salton Trough.
    Print ISSN: 0016-7606
    Electronic ISSN: 1943-2674
    Topics: Geosciences
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2011-05-01
    Description: Electron microprobe analyses of 128 detrital rutile grains from two Jurassic sandstone samples (Hettangian and Bajocian-Bathonian in age) from hydrocarbon exploration wells on the Norwegian margin confirm that more than 85 % of the rutiles were derived from metapelitic rocks. Zr-in-rutile geothermometry confirms that about 83 % of the rutile was formed under high-grade metamorphism (〉750 {degrees}C). Sixty-two rutile grains, including 60 of the identified high-temperature rutile population, were also analysed for U-Pb geochronology using SHRIMP. The 206Pb-238U rutile ages range from approximately 485-292 Ma, with a major cluster between 450 and 380 Ma. These data suggest that the detrital rutile was predominantly derived from a felsic source that experienced granulite-facies metamorphism about 450-380 Ma ago. This conclusion is consistent with derivation from high-grade Caledonian metasedimentary rocks, probably the Krummedal sequence in central East Greenland, as previously suggested by an earlier provenance study using conventional heavy mineral analysis, garnet geochemistry and detrital zircon age dating. The present study underscores the importance of rutile geochemistry and geochronology in quantitative single-mineral provenance analysis of clastic sedimentary rocks.
    Print ISSN: 0016-7568
    Electronic ISSN: 1469-5081
    Topics: Geosciences
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2012-07-01
    Description: Field observations from the Trinity Peninsula Group at View Point on the Antarctic Peninsula indicate that thick, southward-younging and overturned clastic sedimentary rocks, comprising unusually coarse conglomeratic lenses within a succession of fine-grained sandstone–mudstone couplets, are the deposits of debris and turbidity flows on or at the foot of a submarine slope. Three detrital zircons from the sandstone–mudstone couplets date deposition at 302 ± 3 Ma, at or shortly after the Carboniferous–Permian boundary. Conglomerates predominantly consist of quartzite and granite and contain boulders exceeding 500 mm in diameter. Zircons from granitoid clasts and a silicic volcanic clast yield U–Pb ages of 466 ± 3 Ma, 373 ± 5 Ma and 487 ± 4 Ma, respectively and have corresponding average εHft values between +0.3 and +7.6. A quartzite clast, conglomerate matrix and sandstone interbedded with the conglomerate units have broadly similar detrital zircon age distributions and Hf isotope compositions. The clast and detrital zircon ages match well with sources within Patagonia; however, the age of one granite clast and the εHf characteristics of some detrital zircons point to a lesser South Africa or Ellsworth Mountain-like contribution, and the quartzite and granite-dominated composition of the conglomerates is similar to upper Palaeozoic diamictites in the Ellsworth Mountains. Unlike detrital zircons, large conglomerate clasts limit possible transport distance, and suggest sedimentation took place on or near the edge of continental crust. Comparison with other upper Palaeozoic to Mesozoic sediments in the Antarctic Peninsula and Patagonia, including detrital zircon composition and the style of deformation, suggests deposition of the Trinity Peninsula Group in an upper plate basin on an active margin, rather than a subduction-related accretionary setting, with slow extension and rifting punctuated by short periods of compression.
    Print ISSN: 0016-7568
    Electronic ISSN: 1469-5081
    Topics: Geosciences
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