Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4677342 Earth and Planetary Science Letters 2012 10 Pages PDF
Abstract

On the D’Entrecasteaux Islands, southeastern Papua New Guinea (PNG), a series of domes expose the youngest known ultrahigh-pressure (UHP) to high-pressure eclogites and associated gneisses. Abundant evidence of partial melting is preserved throughout the D’Entrecasteaux domes in the form of variably deformed leucosomes, dikes, and plutonic bodies. In order to understand (1) the timing of melt emplacement relative to the UHP metamorphism and (2) the complete exhumation and deformational history of the eclogites and surrounding gneisses, a series of leucosomes, dikes, and eclogites from the Mailolo dome in western Fergusson Island were analyzed by U–Pb ID-TIMS zircon geochronology. Zircons extracted from the eclogite at the UHP locality yield 206Pb/238U TIMS dates from 5.60±0.22 to 4.61±0.18 Ma. Zircons from three foliation-parallel leucosomes are interpreted to record melt crystallization from 3.49±0.01 Ma to 2.98±0.02 Ma. In comparison, weakly deformed granitic–granodioritic dikes that cut the leucosomes yield zircon 206Pb/238U dates of 2.48±0.01 Ma–2.420±0.002 Ma. Based on these new and previously published results, the eclogites may have undergone UHP metamorphism for several million years, from 7.1±0.7 Ma to 4.61±0.18 Ma; based on TIMS dates alone, a more restricted interval of 5.6–4.6 Ma is proposed. Following UHP metamorphism, the eclogite and gneisses were exhumed to lower crustal depths, intruded by foliation-parallel leucosomes by ca. 3.5–3.0 Ma and by ca. 2.45 Ma late discordant dikes. Multiple generations of leucosomes and dikes allow a timeline for the exhumation of the PNG UHP terrane to be constructed: mantle (∼100 km depths) to the base of the crust in ∼1 my, storage in the lower crust for ∼1 my, and final emplacement into the shallow crust ∼1 my later.

► Results reveal that the Papua New Guinea eclogites achieved UHP metamorphism from 5±2 Ma. ► These are the youngest coesite-bearing eclogites in the world. ► Leucosomes and dikes reveal mantle to Moho exhumation in ∼2 my. ► Full exhumation of the (U)HP rocks occurred in < 5 my.

Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Earth and Planetary Sciences (General)
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