Upper and lower crust recycling in the source of CAMP basaltic dykes from southeastern North America

The densest dykes swarm of the Central Atlantic magmatic province (CAMP) occur in southeastern North America (SENA) and were intruded between 202 and 195 Ma during Pangea break-up. New combined geochemical data (major and trace elements, Sr–Nd–Pb–Os isotopes) constrain the mantle source of these mag...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Callegaro, S., Marzoli, A., Bertrand, H., Chiaradia, M., Reisberg, L., Meyzen, C., Bellieni, G., Weems, R., Merle, Renaud
Format: Journal Article
Published: Elsevier Science BV 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/42388
_version_ 1848756406137651200
author Callegaro, S.
Marzoli, A.
Bertrand, H.
Chiaradia, M.
Reisberg, L.
Meyzen, C.
Bellieni, G.
Weems, R.
Merle, Renaud
author_facet Callegaro, S.
Marzoli, A.
Bertrand, H.
Chiaradia, M.
Reisberg, L.
Meyzen, C.
Bellieni, G.
Weems, R.
Merle, Renaud
author_sort Callegaro, S.
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description The densest dykes swarm of the Central Atlantic magmatic province (CAMP) occur in southeastern North America (SENA) and were intruded between 202 and 195 Ma during Pangea break-up. New combined geochemical data (major and trace elements, Sr–Nd–Pb–Os isotopes) constrain the mantle source of these magmatic bodies and their evolution path. While Sr–Nd isotopic compositions for SENA rocks (87Sr/86Sr200Ma 0.70438–0.70880 and 143Nd/144Nd200Ma 0.51251–0.51204) fall within the low-Ti CAMP field, Pb–Pb isotopes (206Pb/204Pb200Ma 17.46–18.85, 207Pb/204Pb200Ma 15.54–15.65, 208Pb/204Pb200Ma 37.47–38.76) are peculiar to this area of the CAMP and cover a considerable span of compositions, especially in 206Pb/204Pb200Ma. Given the generally unradiogenic Os isotopic compositions (187Os/188Os200Ma 0.127–0.144) observed and the lack of correlation between these and other geochemical markers, crustal contamination during the evolution of SENA dykes must have been limited (less than 10%). Thus the isotopic variation is interpreted to reside primarily within the mantle source.These observations, coupled with typical continental signatures in trace elements (positive anomaly in Pb and negative anomalies in Ti and Nb), require another means of conveying a continental flavor to these magmas, which is here hypothesized to be the shallow recycling within the upper mantle of subducted lower and upper crustal materials. Pseudo-ternary mixing models show that a maximum of 10% recycled crust is enough to explain their trace element patterns as well as their isotopic heterogeneity. Looking at the larger picture of the origin of the CAMP, the thermal contribution of a mantle plume cannot be ruled out due to the relatively high mantle potential temperatures (1430–1480 °C) calculated for high-Fo SENA olivines. Nevertheless, our results suggest that the chemical involvement of a mantle plume is negligible (less than 5%) if either a C- or an EM-flavored plume is considered. Rather, the possibility of a PREMA-flavored mantle plume, enriched by 5–20% recycled crustal material, remains a possible, though less plausible, source for these tholeiites.
first_indexed 2025-11-14T09:11:41Z
format Journal Article
id curtin-20.500.11937-42388
institution Curtin University Malaysia
institution_category Local University
last_indexed 2025-11-14T09:11:41Z
publishDate 2013
publisher Elsevier Science BV
recordtype eprints
repository_type Digital Repository
spelling curtin-20.500.11937-423882017-09-13T14:23:35Z Upper and lower crust recycling in the source of CAMP basaltic dykes from southeastern North America Callegaro, S. Marzoli, A. Bertrand, H. Chiaradia, M. Reisberg, L. Meyzen, C. Bellieni, G. Weems, R. Merle, Renaud Os–Sr–Nd–Pb isotopes CAMP Appalachians dykes crustal recycling mantle source The densest dykes swarm of the Central Atlantic magmatic province (CAMP) occur in southeastern North America (SENA) and were intruded between 202 and 195 Ma during Pangea break-up. New combined geochemical data (major and trace elements, Sr–Nd–Pb–Os isotopes) constrain the mantle source of these magmatic bodies and their evolution path. While Sr–Nd isotopic compositions for SENA rocks (87Sr/86Sr200Ma 0.70438–0.70880 and 143Nd/144Nd200Ma 0.51251–0.51204) fall within the low-Ti CAMP field, Pb–Pb isotopes (206Pb/204Pb200Ma 17.46–18.85, 207Pb/204Pb200Ma 15.54–15.65, 208Pb/204Pb200Ma 37.47–38.76) are peculiar to this area of the CAMP and cover a considerable span of compositions, especially in 206Pb/204Pb200Ma. Given the generally unradiogenic Os isotopic compositions (187Os/188Os200Ma 0.127–0.144) observed and the lack of correlation between these and other geochemical markers, crustal contamination during the evolution of SENA dykes must have been limited (less than 10%). Thus the isotopic variation is interpreted to reside primarily within the mantle source.These observations, coupled with typical continental signatures in trace elements (positive anomaly in Pb and negative anomalies in Ti and Nb), require another means of conveying a continental flavor to these magmas, which is here hypothesized to be the shallow recycling within the upper mantle of subducted lower and upper crustal materials. Pseudo-ternary mixing models show that a maximum of 10% recycled crust is enough to explain their trace element patterns as well as their isotopic heterogeneity. Looking at the larger picture of the origin of the CAMP, the thermal contribution of a mantle plume cannot be ruled out due to the relatively high mantle potential temperatures (1430–1480 °C) calculated for high-Fo SENA olivines. Nevertheless, our results suggest that the chemical involvement of a mantle plume is negligible (less than 5%) if either a C- or an EM-flavored plume is considered. Rather, the possibility of a PREMA-flavored mantle plume, enriched by 5–20% recycled crustal material, remains a possible, though less plausible, source for these tholeiites. 2013 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/42388 10.1016/j.epsl.2013.06.023 Elsevier Science BV restricted
spellingShingle Os–Sr–Nd–Pb isotopes
CAMP
Appalachians
dykes
crustal recycling
mantle source
Callegaro, S.
Marzoli, A.
Bertrand, H.
Chiaradia, M.
Reisberg, L.
Meyzen, C.
Bellieni, G.
Weems, R.
Merle, Renaud
Upper and lower crust recycling in the source of CAMP basaltic dykes from southeastern North America
title Upper and lower crust recycling in the source of CAMP basaltic dykes from southeastern North America
title_full Upper and lower crust recycling in the source of CAMP basaltic dykes from southeastern North America
title_fullStr Upper and lower crust recycling in the source of CAMP basaltic dykes from southeastern North America
title_full_unstemmed Upper and lower crust recycling in the source of CAMP basaltic dykes from southeastern North America
title_short Upper and lower crust recycling in the source of CAMP basaltic dykes from southeastern North America
title_sort upper and lower crust recycling in the source of camp basaltic dykes from southeastern north america
topic Os–Sr–Nd–Pb isotopes
CAMP
Appalachians
dykes
crustal recycling
mantle source
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/42388