Title of article :
Growth of complex sheeted zones during recycling of older magmatic units into younger: Sawmill Canyon area, Tuolumne batholith, Sierra Nevada, California
Author/Authors :
Paterson، نويسنده , , Scott R. and ??k، نويسنده , , Ji?? and Janou?ek، نويسنده , , Vojt?ch، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
Pages :
28
From page :
457
To page :
484
Abstract :
In Sawmill Canyon, located near the eastern margin of the Tuolumne batholith, central Sierra Nevada, California, a series of petrologically and structurally complex, magmatic sheeted zones intrude older granodioritic units (Kuna Crest and equigranular Half Dome) and in one case truncate these units along a sharp contact. These sheeted zones (a) consist of numerous batches of (now frozen) magma, (b) display clear outward growth directions, (c) were actively deforming during and after emplacement resulting in magmatic folds, faults and multiple magmatic mineral fabrics, and (d) are the location of numerous, but localized magma flow structures (schlieren-bounded tubes, troughs, megacryst-rich pipes) and instabilities (load casts, flame structures, slumps, diapirs, ridge and pillar structures). Geochemical data indicate that the sheeted zones largely consist of magmas derived from the Half Dome granodiorite with some late Cathedral Peak granodiorite pulses, and with fractionation and flow sorting forming widespread layering in the above structures. erpret these sheeted zones to record the pulsing of magma during propagation and expansion of opening-mode (Mode I), submagmatic fractures at the margins of large blocks of older, fairly solidified magmatic pulses that were subsequently removed from the present crustal level. Elsewhere in the Tuolumne batholith we see similar features suggesting that a “recycling” process, i.e., the breaking off of older parts of the magma chamber and incorporation into younger intrusive units, occurred in this batholith. This recycling removed a significant portion of older units and resulted in the formation of sheeted zones and local instabilities in this batholith. Finally this recycling is one process responsible for transfer of zircon crystals between units and for obscuring whole-rock geochemical signatures.
Keywords :
Tuolumne batholith , Magmatic layering , Magma mingling , pluton , Sierra Nevada , Stoping
Journal title :
Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research
Serial Year :
2008
Journal title :
Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research
Record number :
2248533
Link To Document :
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