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Oligo-miocene subduction-related volcanism of the loyalty and three Kings ridges, SW Pacific: A precursor to Tonga-Kermadec arc
The SW Pacific region contains several ridges and basins that are inferred to represent pre-Quaternary volcanic arcs and back-arc basins. The geology of these features is less well characterized than that of the active Tonga-Kermadec and Vanuatu arcs. We report new major and trace element, and Pb, Hf, Sr and Nd isotope data for 27 lavas dredged from the Loyalty and Three Kings ridges during the 2015 VESPA cruise of R/V l'Atalante. Low-K basalts were dredged from the seabed deeper than 3300 m, and high-K to shoshonitic suites from shallower ridge crests at 2000–3300 m. The samples are mainly basalts, with lesser trachybasalts, basaltic andesites, trachyandesites andesites, dacites, and one granite (anhydrous SiO2 and K2O + Na2O range from ∼47 to 64 and 1.5 to 11 wt% respectively). Trace element patterns allow discrimination of three geochemical signatures, identified as i) depleted, ii) transitional and iii) enriched, based on their light to heavy rare earth element (REE) ratios (with La/Sm ranging from 0.4 to 8). Depleted and transitional samples are basalts, featuring REE concentrations similar to MORB, but with high field strength element and large ion lithophile element contents, typical of back-arc basin basalts. The most enriched samples are basaltic andesites, andesites, trachyandesites and trachytes with island arc magma trace element signatures. Pb isotope ranges are limited (208Pb/204Pb ∼38 to 39.8, 207Pb/204Pb ∼15.51 to 15.64 and 206Pb/∼17.9 to 20.1), while Hf isotopes display more diverse compositions (εHf ranging from +7.7 to +14). Both Nd (εNd = 2.8–9.3) and Sr (87Sr/86Sr = 0.7026–0.7048) isotopes are correlated with Hf data. Trace element and isotopic compositions can be explained in terms of mixing between three distinct geochemical endmembers in the mantle resembling DMM, HIMU and EM-2 sources. Our study confirms voluminous subduction-related magmatism on the Loyalty and Three Kings ridges, mostly of Late Oligocene – Early Miocene age. The issue of polarity of subduction to generate these rocks remains open, but the composition-space-time distribution of the igneous rocks can be explained in the context of SW Pacific geodynamics using a west-dipping Pacific slab model.
Keyword(s)
Zealandia, Loyalty Ridge, Three Kings Ridge, Igneous rocks, Geochemistry, Subduction
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File | Pages | Size | Access | |
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Publisher's official version | 12 | 3 Mo | ||
Fig. S1-S6 | - | 28 Mo | ||
Author's final draft | 41 | 12 Mo |