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Using pyroxene microphenocrysts to determine cosmogenic 3He concentrations in old volcanic rocks: an example of landscape development in central Gran Canaria
Institution:1. College of Earth Sciences, Jilin University, Changchun 130061, China;2. MLR Key Laboratory of Metallogeny and Mineral Assessment, Institute of Mineral Resources, Chinese Academy of Geological Sciences, Beijing 100037, China;3. Henan Provincial Non-ferrous Metals Geological and Mineral Resources Bureau, Zhengzhou 450016, China;4. No. 3 Geological Survey, Henan Bureau of Geology and Mineral Resources, Xinyang 464000, China
Abstract:Determinations of cosmogenic 3He exposure ages and erosion rates in volcanic rocks older than a few hundred thousand years are complicated by the presence of radiogenic He in addition to the magmatic and cosmogenic He, in phenocryst minerals. However, by analysing microphenocrysts (that crystallised on or immediately prior to eruption) that have not trapped magmatic He, the three-component problem can be eliminated and accurate determinations of cosmogenic 3He made. In this study, we perform three experiments using pyroxene microphenocrysts in basaltic clasts in the Pliocene Ayacata Formation breccias, Gran Canaria, that demonstrate they are free of magmatic He. Exposure ages and erosion rates calculated from the cosmogenic 3He concentrations are combined with a geomorphological study, to produce a tentative interpretation of landscape evolution in the mountainous interior of Gran Canaria. Long-term steady-state erosion rates of 14–24 mm ka−1 are recorded from bedrock erosional surfaces on a high plateau. Headwall retreat rates for a major drainage system of 1.6 m ka−1 have been constrained from the ca 225 ka exposure age of a boulder emplaced on slopes beneath the headwall. Strath terraces and boulders in a small canyon system yield much younger exposure ages of 47–43 ka.
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