Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
6440329 | Lithos | 2016 | 74 Pages |
Abstract
The last episode of subduction ended ~Â 85Â Ma, and was followed by continental break-up, rifting and lithospheric attenuation that produced the West Antarctic rift as we know it today. Thus, the enigmatic geochemical signatures in these three volcanoes seem to have been preserved roughly 61-85Â m.y. after subduction ended. New calculations of source melting depth and a new determination of lithospheric thickness suggest that the source of the anomalies resides in a fossil mélange diapir that rose from the Cretaceous subducting slab, became attached to the base of the lithosphere at 80-100Â km depth, and remained there during the subsequent plate motion and source remobilization history of this region.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Earth and Planetary Sciences
Geochemistry and Petrology
Authors
Wesley E. LeMasurier, Sung Hi Choi, Stanley R. Hart, Sam Mukasa, Nick Rogers,