Magmatic characteristics and geochronology of Ordovician igneous rocks from the Cadia - Neville region, New South Wales: implications for tectonic evolution
TheOrdovician volcanic and intrusive rocks of the Cadia ‚Äö-Neville region, in the southern Molong Volcanic Belt section of the Macquarie Arc in central-western New South Wales, display a temporal progression from shoshonitic basaltic volcanism (e.g. Mt Pleasant Basalt Member) in the late Darriwilian to Gisbornian (ca 460 ‚Äö- 453 Ma) to small-volume dacitic medium-K calc-alkaline magmatism (e.g. Copper Hill-type dacite) in the late Eastonian to early Bolindian (ca 450 ‚Äö- 445 Ma) to large-volume, high-K calc-alkaline to shoshonitic, mafic to highly evolved magmatism (e.g. Nullawonga Latite Member and Cadia Intrusive Complex) at about 445 ‚Äö- 440 Ma. The two episodes of shoshonitic magmatism are separated by at least 15 (but up to *20) million years, during which time limestones, associated with regional uplift, were deposited broadly coincident with emplacement of the medium-K calc-alkaline dacitic intrusions. Despite this, the lavas and intrusions associated with both episodes of shoshonitic magmatism have strikingly similar geochemistry, indicating that a similar mantle source and partial melting processes were involved over this time interval. The arc-type geochemistry of the volcanic and intrusive rocks in the Cadia‚Äö-Neville region is very similar to the lavas and intrusions forming the Pliocene Tavua Caldera in Viti Levu, Fiji. The Pliocene shoshonitic rocks at Tavua Caldera were emplaced following cessation of arc magmatism when the arc moved into an extensional phase. By analogy with the Pliocene tectonic setting in Fiji, the arc-like signature of the Ordovician magmas of the Macquarie Arc may be due to preprocessing of the mantle above a subduction zone prior to extension and fragmentation of arc lithosphere that led to generation of the subduction-modified shoshonite-dominated magmas.
History
Publication title
Australian Journal of Earth Sciences
Volume
54
Article number
2-3'
Number
2-3'
Pagination
293-314
ISSN
0812-0099
Publication status
Published
Rights statement
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