Title of article
Was the Himalayan orogen a climatically significant coupled source and sink for atmospheric CO2 during the Cenozoic?
Author/Authors
Kerrick، D. M. نويسنده , , Caldeira، K. نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1999
Pages
-194
From page
195
To page
0
Abstract
Mafic to ultramafic dykes and sills in South China, dated as 828±7 Ma old, are identical in age to the 827±6 Ma Gairdner Dyke Swarm in Australia, thought to be of mantle plume origin. These intrusive rocks, accompanied by widespread granite intrusions and rapid unroofing at a lateral extent of ca. 1000 km, and followed by continental rifting, are interpreted to indicate the arrival of a plume head centred beneath South China. This interpretation supports the idea that South China lay between Australia and Laurentia in the Rodinia supercontinent, and suggests that Rodinia breakup may have started with a mantle plume which initiated continental rifting at about 820 Ma ago.
Keywords
Paleoclimatology , metamorphism , chemical weathering , Cenozoic , Carbon dioxide , Himalayas
Journal title
EARTH & PLANETARY SCIENCE LETTERS
Serial Year
1999
Journal title
EARTH & PLANETARY SCIENCE LETTERS
Record number
53161
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