Title of article :
40Ar39Ar geochronology of Tertiary mafic intrusions along the East Greenland rifted margin: Relation to flood basalts and the Iceland hotspot track
Author/Authors :
Tegner، نويسنده , , C. and Duncan، نويسنده , , R.A. and Bernstein، نويسنده , , S. and Brooks، نويسنده , , C.K. and Bird، نويسنده , , D.K. and Storey، نويسنده , , M.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1998
Abstract :
The East Greeland Tertiary Igneous Province includes the largest exposed continental flood basalt sequence within the North Atlantic borderlands. More than ten layered gabbro complexes, including the ∼55 Ma Skaergaard intrusion, and a large dolerite sill complex are the plutonic equivalents of flood basalts; both lavas and intrusions have been regarded as synchronous with continental breakup at 57-54 Ma. We report ten new ages of the mafic intrusions, determined by40Ar39Ar incremental heating experiments, demonstrating that the mafic intrusions formed in two distinct time windows. Only Intrusion II of the Imilik Gabbro Complex, the Skaergaard intrusion, and the Sorgenfri Glestcher Sill Complex formed at 57-55 Ma coeval with the eruption of regional flood basalts and continental breakup. Other layered gabbro intrusions at Imilik (Intrusion III), Kruuse Fjord, Igtutarajik, Nordre Aputiteˆq, Kap Edvard Holm, and Lilloise are distinctly younger and formed between 50 and 47 Ma. Plate-kinematic models indicate the axis of the ancestral Iceland mantle plume was located under Central Greenland at ∼60 Ma and subsequently crossed the East Greenland rifted continental margin. We propose that tholeiitic magmatism along the East Greenland rifted margin largely occurred in three distinct pulses at 62-59 Ma (lavas and dykes), 57-54 Ma (lavas, dykes, sills, and some gabbros) and 50-47 Ma (gabbros, dykes and rare lavas), related to discrete mantle melting episodes triggered by plume impact, continental breakup, and passage of the plume axis, respectively. This model implies northwestward continental drift of Greenland relative to the plume axis by ∼3.9-5.0 cm/yr between ∼60 and ∼49 Ma, consistent with estimates from seismic studies of submerged flood basalts.
Keywords :
Ar-40/Ar-39 , Iceland , volcanic features , Flood basalt , Continental drift , hot spots , Intrusions
Journal title :
Earth and Planetary Science Letters
Journal title :
Earth and Planetary Science Letters