کد مقاله | کد نشریه | سال انتشار | مقاله انگلیسی | نسخه تمام متن |
---|---|---|---|---|
4678033 | 1634824 | 2011 | 13 صفحه PDF | دانلود رایگان |

The 117 Ma Sylhet Traps, exposed on the southern edge of the Shillong Plateau in northeastern India, are separated from the Rajmahal Traps ~ 550 km to the west by the Gangetic-Brahmaputra alluvium of the Bengal basin. On the basis of their similar age, Sylhet and Rajmahal Traps are correlated. We report Nd–Sr–Pb-isotopic and multiple trace element data for 18 discrete and consecutive lava flows from two sections of the Sylhet Traps. Thirteen of the analyzed lavas are from the Cherrapunji-Shella (CH) Bazaar section and five from the Mawsynram-Balot (MB) section. In major, trace elements and Nd–Sr–Pb isotopes, most of these lavas show similarity with Rajmahal Traps, Bunbury basalts and lavas from Naturaliste and parts of the Kerguelen Plateaus, allowing reconstruction of a ~ 800 km Kerguelen plume-head in the Bengal basin aligned with the Ninetyeast Ridge.The combined geochemical data and their correlation with the Rajmahal Traps, Bunbury basalts, and some Kerguelen Plateau lavas, imply a relatively less depleted plume source for CH basalts. We assess the average composition of this source at 117 Ma to be: εNd(I) = 2, 87Sr/86Sr(I) = 0.7046, with relatively flat rare earth element patterns, similar to the basalts from the Ocean Drilling Sites 1138, 1141 and 1142 on the Kerguelen Plateau. The Nd–Sr-isotopic data for the Sylhet basalts are modeled with two end members, an 18% partial melt from a chondritic garnet peridotite source, and a granulitic contaminant of the Eastern Ghats Belt. Most of the Sylhet lavas are close to the proposed plume end-member. The contaminated Sylhet basalts reflect as much as 20% of the granulite component caused by the incorporation of lower-continental crust in the Kerguelen plume-derived melt.Combined Nd–Sr–Pb-isotopic evidence, and, in particular, Ce/Pb vs. εNd(I) mixing-models among different reservoirs indicate more primitive CH lavas to be mixture of bulk-chondritic Earth and E-MORB, without apparent mixing with N-MORB, continental crust, or non-chondritic bulk Earth. However, Sr–Pb-isotopic ratios of these lavas fall in the estimated ranges of non-chondritic bulk Earth. The least contaminated Kerguelen plume component may be common to other large igneous provinces.
Research highlights
► We report trace-major element and isotope geochemistry of Sylhet Basalts, NE India.
► Data allow correlations with Rajmahal Traps and Kerguelen plume related basalts.
► Some lavas reflect contamination by crustal granulites of the Eastern Ghats Belt.
► We infer a relatively uncontaminated Kerguelen plume as source of the Sylhet lavas.
► Rajmahal–Sylhet Bengal traps are vestiges of the Kerguelen plume in northeast India.
Journal: Earth and Planetary Science Letters - Volume 308, Issues 1–2, 1 August 2011, Pages 52–64