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Valverde Cardenas, Carolina, Indares, Aphrodite, Jenner, George (2012) Mafic and ultrapotassic rocks from the Canyon domain (central Grenville Province): geochemistry and tectonic implications. Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences, 49 (2) 412-433 doi:10.1139/e11-065

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Reference TypeJournal (article/letter/editorial)
TitleMafic and ultrapotassic rocks from the Canyon domain (central Grenville Province): geochemistry and tectonic implications
JournalCanadian Journal of Earth Sciences
AuthorsValverde Cardenas, CarolinaAuthor
Indares, AphroditeAuthor
Jenner, GeorgeAuthor
Year2012 (February)Volume49
Issue2
PublisherCanadian Science Publishing
DOIdoi:10.1139/e11-065Search in ResearchGate
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Mindat Ref. ID484810Long-form Identifiermindat:1:5:484810:7
GUID0
Full ReferenceValverde Cardenas, Carolina, Indares, Aphrodite, Jenner, George (2012) Mafic and ultrapotassic rocks from the Canyon domain (central Grenville Province): geochemistry and tectonic implications. Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences, 49 (2) 412-433 doi:10.1139/e11-065
Plain TextValverde Cardenas, Carolina, Indares, Aphrodite, Jenner, George (2012) Mafic and ultrapotassic rocks from the Canyon domain (central Grenville Province): geochemistry and tectonic implications. Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences, 49 (2) 412-433 doi:10.1139/e11-065
In(2012, February) Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences Vol. 49 (2) Canadian Science Publishing
Abstract/Notes The Canyon domain and the Banded complex in the Manicouagan area of the Grenville Province preserve a record of magmatic activity from ∼1.4 to 1 Ga. This study focuses on 1.4–1.2 Ga mafic rocks and 1 Ga ultrapotassic dykes. Geochemistry and Sm–Nd isotopic signatures were used to constrain the origin of these rocks and evaluate the changing role of the mantle with time and tectonic setting from the late evolution of the Laurentian margin to the Grenvillian orogeny, in the Manicouagan area. The mafic rocks include layers inferred to represent flows, homogeneous bodies in mafic migmatite, and deformed dykes, all of which were recrystallized under granulite-facies conditions during the Grenvillian orogeny. In spite of the complexities inherent in these deformed and metamorphosed mafic rocks, we were able to recognize suites with distinctive geochemical and isotopic signatures. Integration of this data along with available ages is consistent with a 1.4 Ga continental arc cut by 1.2 Ga non-arc basalts derived from depleted asthenospheric mantle, with varied degrees of crustal contamination and inferred to represent magmatism in an extensional environment. The 1 Ga ultrapotassic dykes postdate the Grenvillian metamorphism. They are extremely enriched in incompatible elements, have negative Nb anomalies, relatively unradiogenic Sr-isotopic compositions (initial 87Sr/86Sr ~ 0.7040) and εNd –3 to –15. Some dykes have compositional characteristics consistent with derivation from the mantle, ruling out crustal contamination as a major process in their petrogenesis. The most likely source region for the ultrapotassic dykes is a metasomatized subcontinental lithospheric mantle, with thermal input from the asthenosphere in association with post-orogenic delamination.


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