Petrogenesis of Late Cenozoic Basalts in North Queensland and Geodynamic Implications
Ming Zhang1, Jon Stephenson2, Suzanne Y. O'Reilly1, M.T. McCulloch3,
M. Norman1 1. GEMOC, Macquarie, 2. Dept of Earth Sciences, James
Cook University, Townsville, 3. Research School of Earth Sciences,
ANU
Late Cenozoic basalts (6 Ma-13 Ka) of six volcanic provinces (Atherton,
McBride, Chudleigh, Nulla, McLean, and Piebald) in North Queensland
(NQld) consist of a chemical spectrum from nephelinite, through
basanite, alkaline olivine basalt, and hawaiite, to olivine tholeiite.
87Sr/86Sr ratios (n=31) range from 0.70340 to 0.70472 and 143Nd/144Nd
ratios (n=29) range from 0.51302 to 0.51279 (eNd =+7.5 - +3.0)
(Zhang et al., 1998a). Although these Sr and Nd isotopic ratios
overlap those for oceanic island basalts and the NSW lava-field
basalts, they clearly differ from the latter in their high 87Sr/86Sr
at a given eNd, thus forming a high 87Sr/86Sr trend. Pb isotopic
ratios (n=12) range in 206Pb/204Pb of 17.93-18.62, in 207Pb/204Pb
of 15.52-15.62, and in 208Pb/204Pb of 37.75-38.55, ubiquitously
displaying the Dupal-type Pb isotopic signatures (D8/4Pb = 37-63,
D7/4Pb = 3.3-10.9). The Sr-Nd-Pb isotopic data fit with two-component
mixing between an isotopically depleted Indian-MORB type component
and an enriched one with EM2 signatures. The basalts with the
enriched isotopic signatures are generally high in K/Nb, K/U,
Rb/Sr, and Zr/Nb, but low in U/Pb and Ce/Pb, consistent with derivation
from a subduction-modified source and possible participation of
phlogopite in the lithospheric mantle melting domain. We propose
that the enriched mantle source is a subcontinental lithospheric
mantle modified by subduction-related processes during the late
Paleozoic orogeny in the region. On the other hand, the depleted
mantle component represents an asthenospheric mantle chemically
identical to the mantle source for the present-day Indian MORB.
The basalts with the depleted isotopic signatures show fractionated
incompatible element patterns with high Ce/Pb, U/Pb, LREE/HREE,
but low K/Nb, K/U, Rb/Sr, and Zr/Nb, similar to or even more fractionated
than some HIMU oceanic island basalts. We attribute these distinct
incompatible element signatures to melting of amphibole- and apatite-bearing
assemblages of metasomatic origin resided in the lithospheric
mantle. The high µ (>70) and low Sm/Nd (~0.15) of the
nephelinites are obviously decoupled from their low 206Pb/204Pb
(< 18.0) and high eNd (> 6.7). This implies that the metasomatism
must be a close precursor of the nephelinitic magmatism, probably
connected with the early Tertiary subduction at the NE margin
of the Australian Plate during the rapid northward motion of the
Australian continent after 50 Ma.
Our data also show that some lava-field basalts (55-30 Ma) in
NSW may require a Pacific-MORB upper mantle as one of their major
sources. This discovery is consistent with the proposed secular
distribution of the Pacific and Indian MORB reservoirs surrounding
the Australian continent in the eastern Gondwana, as deduced from
studies of back-arc basin basalts in the SW Pacific and ocean
floor basalts in the Southern Ocean (eg Hergt and Hawkesworth,
1994; Lanyon et al, 1995). We further suggest that the Indian
MORB mantle is a long-term mantle reservoir beneath most part
of the East Gondwana and the westward migration of the P-MORB
mantle may have partly associated with the Tasman Sea opening
(ca 82-60 Ma) along a broad front southeast of the Australian
continent (Zhang et al., 1998b).
An isotopic framework of mantle reservoirs, based on mixing relationships
between various theoretical end-members, can now be established
in eastern Australia. The delineated source end-members include
the Pacific and Indian Ocean asthenosphere, two mantle plumes
(one presently located near the Bass Strait and another at Balleny
Islands), and SCLM domains with both EM2 and EM1 signatures.
The secular distribution of these mantle reservoirs are consistent
with the evolutionary history of the Tasman foldbelts in eastern
Australia.
References
Hergt, J.M., and Hawkesworth, C.J., 1994. The Pb, Sr, and Nd isotopic
evolution of the Lau Basin: implications for mantle dynamics during
the back-arc opening. Proceedings of the Oceanic Drilling Program,
Scientific Results, 135, 505-518.
Lanyon, R., Crawford, A.J., and Eggins, S.M., 1995. Western migration
of Pacific Ocean upper mantle into the Southern Ocean region between
Australia and Antarctica. Geology, 23, 511-514.
Zhang, M., Stephenson, J., O'Reilly, S.Y., McCulloch, M.T. and
Norman, M., 1998a. Petrogenesis of late Cenozoic basalts in North
Queensland and its geodynamic implications: trace element and
Sr-Nd-Pb isotope evidence. Submitted to J. Pet.
Zhang, M., O'Reilly, S.Y. and Chen, D., 1998b. Pacific- and Indian-MORB
mantle as source reservoirs for the Cenozoic basalts in eastern
Australia: Pb-Sr-Nd isotope evidence. Submitted to Geology.
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