학술논문

New constraints on the age, geochemistry, and environmental impact of high arctic large igneous province magmatism; tracing the extension of the Alpha Ridge onto Ellesmere Island, Canada
Document Type
Academic Journal
Source
Geological Society of America Bulletin. 133(7-8):1695-1711
Subject
05A|Petrology - igneous and metamorphic rocks
02C|Geochemistry - rock, sediment, soil
Alpha Cordillera
Arctic Ocean
Axel Heiberg Island
basalts
Campanian
Canada
cathodoluminescence
Cenomanian
Cretaceous
dacites
dates
dikes
Ellesmere Island
genesis
geochemistry
High Arctic Large Igneous Province
ICP mass spectra
igneous rocks
intrusions
ion probe data
large igneous provinces
lava
magmatism
magnetic anomalies
major elements
mass spectra
Mesozoic
metals
Nunavut
oceanic anoxic events
petrography
plutonic rocks
Queen Elizabeth Islands
rare earths
revision
SHRIMP data
spectra
Strand Fjord Formation
stratotypes
Sverdrup Islands
syenites
thin sections
tholeiite
trace elements
U/Pb
Upper Cretaceous
volcanic rocks
whole rock
X-ray fluorescence spectra
Language
English
ISSN
0016-7606
Abstract
The High Arctic Large Igneous Province (HALIP) represents extensive Cretaceous magmatism throughout the circum-Arctic borderlands and within the Arctic Ocean (e.g., the Alpha-Mendeleev Ridge). Recent aeromagnetic data shows anomalies that extend from the Alpha Ridge onto the northern coast of Ellesmere Island, Nunavut, Canada. To test this linkage we present new bulk rock major and trace element geochemistry, and mineral compositions for clinopyroxene, plagioclase, and olivine of basaltic dykes and sheets and rhyolitic lavas for the stratotype section at Hansen Point, which coincides geographically with the magnetic anomaly at northern Ellesmere Island. New U-Pb chronology is also presented. The basaltic and basaltic-andesite dykes and sheets at Hansen Point are all evolved with 5.5-2.5 wt% MgO, 48.3-57.0 wt% SiO2, and have light rare-earth element enriched patterns. They classify as tholeiites and in Th/Yb vs. Nb/Yb space they define a trend extending from the mantle array toward upper continental crust. This trend, also including a rhyolite lava, can be modeled successfully by assimilation and fractional crystallization. The U-Pb data for a dacite sample, that is cut by basaltic dykes at Hansen Point, yields a crystallization age of 95.5±1.0 Ma, and also shows crustal inheritance. The chronology and the geochemistry of the Hansen Point samples are correlative with the basaltic lavas, sills, and dykes of the Strand Fiord Formation on Axel Heiberg Island, Nunavut, Canada. In contrast, a new U-Pb age for an alkaline syenite at Audhild Bay is significantly younger at 79.5±0.5 Ma, and correlative to alkaline basalts and rhyolites from other locations of northern Ellesmere Island (Audhild Bay, Philips Inlet, and Yelverton Bay West; 83-73 Ma). We propose these volcanic occurrences be referred to collectively as the Audhild Bay alkaline suite (ABAS). In this revised nomenclature, the rocks of Hansen Point stratotype and other tholeiitic rocks are ascribed to the Hansen Point tholeiitic suite (HPTS) that was emplaced at 97-93 Ma. We suggest this subdivision into suites replace the collective term Hansen Point volcanic complex. The few dredge samples of alkali basalt available from the top of the Alpha Ridge are akin to ABAS in terms of geochemistry. Our revised dates also suggest that the HPTS and Strand Fiord Formation volcanic rocks may be the hypothesized subaerial large igneous province eruption that drove the Cretaceous Ocean Anoxic Event 2.