Oldest Atlantic seafloor |
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Authors: | W B Bryan F A Frey G Thompson |
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Institution: | (1) Department of Geology and Geophysics, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, 02543 Woods Hole, Massachusetts, USA;(2) Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 02139 Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA;(3) Department of Chemistry, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, 02543 Woods Hole, Massachusetts, USA |
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Abstract: | Basalt recovered beneath Jurassic sediments in the western Atlantic at Deep Sea Drilling Project sites 100 and 105 of leg 11 has petrographic features characteristic of water-quenched basalt extruded along modern ocean ridges. Site 100 basalt appears to represent two or three massive cooling units, and an extrusive emplacement is probable. Site 105 basalt is less altered and appears to be a compositionally homogeneous pillow lava sequence related to a single eruptive episode.Although the leg 11 basalts are much more closely related in time to the Triassic lavas and intrusives of eastern continental North America, their geochemical features are closely comparable to those of modern Mid-Atlantic Ridge basalts unrelated to postulated mantle plume activity. Projection of leg 11 sites back along accepted spreading flow lines to their presumed points of origin shows that these origins are also outside the influence of modern plume activity. Thus, these oldest Atlantic seafloor basalts provide no information on the time of initiation of these plumes . The Triassic continental diabases show north to south compositional variations in Rb, Ba, La, and Sr which lie within the range of plume -related basalt on the Mid-Atlantic Ridge (20 °–40 °N). This suggests that these diabases had mantle sources similar in composition to those beneath the present Mid-Atlantic Ridge. Plumes related to deep mantle sources may have contributed to the LIL-element enrichment in the Triassic diabase and may alos have been instrumental in initiating the rifting of the North Atlantic. Systematically high values for K and Sr87/Sr86 in the Triassic diabases may reflect superimposed effects of crustal contamination in the Triassic magmas.Contribution Number 3953 from the Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution |
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