Strontium isotopic studies of the volcanic rocks of the Saunda arc,Indonesia, and their petrogenetic implications |
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Authors: | D.J Whitford |
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Affiliation: | Research School of Earth Sciences, Australian National University, Canberra, Australia |
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Abstract: | Pleistocene and Recent lavas from the Sunda arc range from those showing affinities with the island arc tholeiitic series, through a spectrum of calc-alkaline to high-K alkaline rocks. The tholeiitic rocks have relatively low ratios averaging 0–7043; the calc-alkaline rocks show a wide range (from 0.7038 to 0.7059, averaging 0.7048); the high-K alkaline rocks average 0.7045. A rhyolitic ignimbrite from Sumatra has an ratio of 0.7139.The relationship between and major and trace element geochemistry is variable and complex. Lavas from the same volcano sometimes show significant differences in despite close geochemical relationships. Rocks of the calc-alkaline suite show a regular decrease in from West Java to Bali and there is some evidence for increasing with increasing depth to the Benioff zone. Calc-alkaline and tholeiitic rocks from the Sunda arc have significantly higher ratios than those from other island arcs, except from those arcs where continental crustal involvement has been inferred (e.g. New Zealand).A model of 87Sr enrichment due to isotopic equilibration of oceanic crust with sea water and disequilibrium melting in the slab and/or mantle is favoured to explain the Sr isotopic composition of the tholeiitic and normal calc-alkaline lavas. Calc-alkaline lavas with high ratios are best explained by either sialic contamination, or the presence of alkali basalt as a component of the downgoing slab. The Sr isotopic data for the high-K alkaline lavas suggest a mantle origin. The high ratio in the Lake Toba rhyolite implies a crustal origin. |
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