Mantle plumes and Antarctica-New Zealand rifting: evidence from mid-Cretaceous mafic dykes
- 1 July 1999
- journal article
- Published by Geological Society of London in Journal of the Geological Society
- Vol. 156 (4) , 659-671
- https://doi.org/10.1144/gsjgs.156.4.0659
Abstract
Ocean floor magnetic anomalies show that New Zealand was the last continental fragment to separate from Antarctica during Gondwana break-up, drifting from Marie Byrd Land, West Antarctica, about 84 Ma ago. Prior to continental drift, a voluminous suite of mafic dykes (dated by Ar–Ar laser stepped heating at 107 ± 5 Ma) and anorogenic silicic rocks, including syenites and peralkaline granitoids (95–102 Ma), were emplaced in Marie Byrd Land during a rifting event. The mafic dyke suite includes both high- and low-Ti basalts. Trace element and Sr and Nd isotope compositions of the mafic dykes may be modelled by mixing between tholeiitic OIB (asthenosphere-derived) and alkaline high- to low-Ti alkaline magmas (lithospheric mantle derived). Pb isotopes indicate that the OIB component had a HIMU composition. We suggest that the rift-related magmatism was generated in the vicinity of a mantle plume. The plume helped to control the position of continental separation within the very wide region of continental extension that developed when the Pacific–Phoenix spreading ridge approached the subduction zone. Separation of New Zealand from Antarctica occurred when the Pacific–Phoenix spreading centre propagated into the Antarctic continent. Sea floor spreading in the region of the mantle plume may have caused an outburst of volcanism along the spreading ridge generating an oceanic plateau, now represented by the 10–15 km thick Hikurangi Plateau situated alongside the Chatham Rise, New Zealand. The plateau consists of tholeiitic OIB-MORB basalt, regarded as Cretaceous in age, and similar in composition to the putative tholeiitic end-member in the Marie Byrd Land dykes. The mantle plume is proposed to now underlie the western Ross Sea, centred beneath Mount Erebus, where it was largely responsible for the very voluminous, intraplate, alkaline McMurdo Volcanic Group. A second mantle plume beneath Marie Byrd Land formed the Cenozoic alkaline volcanic province.Keywords
This publication has 50 references indexed in Scilit:
- Patterns of late Cenozoic volcanic and tectonic activity in the West Antarctic rift system revealed by aeromagnetic surveysTectonics, 1996
- Hikurangi Plateau: A Cretaceous large igneous province in the southwest Pacific OceanJournal of Geophysical Research, 1996
- Geochronology of Cretaceous granites and metasedimentary basement on Edward VII Peninsula, Marie Byrd Land, West AntarcticaAntarctic Science, 1995
- Early Cretaceous paleomagnetic results from Marie Byrd Land, West Antarctica: Implications for the Weddellia collage of crustal blocksJournal of Geophysical Research, 1995
- The age, geology, and geochemistry of the Tapuaenuku Igneous Complex, Marlborough, New ZealandNew Zealand Journal of Geology and Geophysics, 1994
- Cooling history of the northern Ford Ranges, Marie Byrd Land, West AntarcticaTectonics, 1994
- Coats Land dolerites and the generation of Antarctic continental flood basaltsGeological Society, London, Special Publications, 1992
- Geophysical studies of the West Antarctic Rift SystemTectonics, 1991
- Petrology of Peter I Øy (Peter I Island), West AntarcticaJournal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research, 1990
- Cretaceous geotectonic patterns in the New Zealand RegionTectonics, 1989