Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
6443122 Earth-Science Reviews 2014 56 Pages PDF
Abstract
Contamination by continental crust or lithosphere can impart subduction-like signatures and lead to the misidentification of contaminated continental intraplate basaltic rocks as arc related ones. Uncontaminated plume-derived continental basaltic rocks are normally characterized by high Nb/La ratios of higher than or near one, low 87Sr/86Sr(t) ratios, high εNd(t) values and “hump-shaped” OIB-like mantle-normalized multi-element patterns without negative Nb, Ta and Ti anomalies. As the uncontaminated plume-derived basaltic rocks have been found in the studied volcanic successions, the possibility can be basically excluded that they belong to island-arc or active continental margin volcanic rocks. The contaminated continental basaltic lavas have higher 87Sr/86Sr, concentrations of incompatible trace elements and lower εNd relative to the arc related ones. For the basaltic lavas with subduction-like signatures, we can judge whether they are really island-arc or active continental margin basalts by utilizing the geochemical diagrams which do not use Nb, Ta or Ti as discriminating factors. The contaminated continental basalts can be distinguished from continental margin by two factors: 1) the overall level of the incompatible elements, including Nb is higher for the contaminated continental basalts, and 2) on trace element diagrams that do not involve Nb, Ta and Ti, even the contaminated basalts exhibit within plate character.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Geology
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