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Massif-type anorthosites, enormous and enigmatic plagioclase-rich cumulate intrusions emplaced into Earth’s crust, formed in large numbers only between 1 and 2 billion years ago. Conflicting hypotheses for massif-type anorthosite formation, including melting of upwelling mantle, lower crustal melting, and arc magmatism above subduction zones, have stymied consensus on what parental magmas crystallized the anorthosites and why the rocks are temporally restricted. Using B, O, Nd, and Sr isotope analyses, bulk chemistry, and petrogenetic modeling, we demonstrate that the magmas parental to the Marcy and Morin anorthosites, classic examples from North America’s Grenville orogen, require large input from mafic melts derived from slab-top altered oceanic crust. The anorthosites also record B isotopic signatures corresponding to other slab lithologies such as subducted abyssal serpentinite. We propose that anorthosite massifs formed underneath convergent continental margins wherein a subducted or subducting slab melted extensively and link massif-type anorthosite formation to Earth’s thermal and tectonic evolution.more » « lessFree, publicly-accessible full text available August 16, 2025
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Abstract Granitic batholiths of the ∼500 Ma Ross Orogen in Antarctica are voluminous in scale, reflecting prolific magmatism along the active early Paleozoic convergent margin of Gondwana. New age and isotopic analysis of zircons from a large suite of Ross granitoids spanning >2,000 km along the orogen provide a wealth of geochronologic, tracer, and inheritance information, enabling us to investigate the pace of magmatism, along‐strike temporal and geochemical trends, magmatic sources, and tectonic modes of convergence. Because granitoids penetrate the crust of the earlier Neoproterozoic rift margin, they also provide insight into the age and composition of the largely ice‐covered East Antarctic craton. Zircon U‐Pb ages from these and other samples indicate that active Ross magmatism spanned 475–590 Ma, much longer than generally regarded. Most samples have heavy zircon δ18O values between 6.5 and 11.5‰ and initial εHfcompositions between 0 and −15; their isotopic co‐variations are independent of age, as in other contemporary continental arcs, and reflect largely crustal melt sources. Samples near Shackleton Glacier have distinctly more mantle‐like isotope composition (i.e., radiogenic εHfand low δ18O) and separate two regions with distinctive isotopic properties and inheritance patterns—a more juvenile section of Mesoproterozoic crust underlying the southern TAM and an older, more evolved region of Paleoproterozoic and Archean crust in the central TAM. The isotopic discontinuity separating these regions indicates the presence of a cryptic crustal boundary of Grenvillian or younger age within the East Antarctic shield that may be traceable into the western Laurentian part of the Rodinia supercontinent.more » « less
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The Montana metasedimentary terrane in the northern Wyoming Province provides valuable insight into crustal formation and reworking processes along the cratonic margin and offers a unique opportunity to decipher the complex Neoarchean−Paleoproterozoic terrane assembly in southwestern Laurentia. We report new zircon U-Pb dates and Hf isotopes from seven metaigneous samples in the northwestern Montana metasedimentary terrane. The internal textures of zircon in this study are complex; some lack inherited cores and metamorphic overgrowths, while others exhibit core-rim relationships. Based on the cathodoluminescence (CL) features, we interpret these grains to be magmatic populations. These data demonstrate discrete igneous pulses at 2.7 Ga, 2.4 Ga, and 1.7 Ga, which indicate significant crustal formation intervals in the Montana metasedimentary terrane. Zircons at 2.7 Ga have positive εHf values (+2.4 to +0.9) that indicate a depleted mantle source. Most 2.4 Ga and 1.7 Ga samples have negative εHf values (−1.6 to −15.5), which indicate significant contributions from preexisting crust. Two 1.7 Ga samples, however, have near-chondritic εHf values (+0.4 to +0.3) that indicate larger juvenile contributions. The time-integrated Hf isotope trend suggests that the Paleoproterozoic zircons were produced from a mixture of older crust and juvenile mantle inputs. Additionally, the isotopic age fingerprint of the Montana metasedimentary terrane suggests that it differs from northern-bounding terranes. Viewed more broadly, the 2.7 Ga and 1.7 Ga age peaks that the Montana metasedimentary terrane shares with the global zircon age spectrum suggest that the drivers of these events in the Montana metasedimentary terrane were common throughout the Earth and may be associated with the assembly of supercontinents Kenorland and Nuna.more » « less
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Abstract Combined Hf-O isotopic analyses of zircons from tuffs and lavas within the Sierra Madre Occidental (SMO) silicic large igneous province are probes of petrogenetic processes in the lower and upper crust. Existing petrogenetic and tectonomagmatic models diverge, having either emphasized significant crustal reworking of hydrated continental lithosphere in an arc above the retreating Farallon slab or significant input of juvenile mantle melts through a slab window into an actively stretching continental lithosphere. New isotopic data are remarkably uniform within and between erupted units across the spatial and temporal extent of the SMO, consistent with homogeneous melt production and evolution. Isotopic values are consistent with enriched mantle magmas (80%) that assimilated Proterozoic paragneisses (~20%) from the lower crust. δ18Ozircon values are consistent with fractionation of mafic magma and not with assimilation of hydrothermally altered upper crust, suggesting that the silicic magmas evolved at depth. Isotopic data agree with previous interpretations where voluminous juvenile melts entered the lithosphere during the transition from a continental arc experiencing slab rollback (Late Eocene) to the arrival of a subducting slab window (Oligocene and Early Miocene) and failure of the upper plate leading to the opening of the Gulf of California (Late Miocene). An anomalously large heat flux and extension of the upper plate allow for the sustained fractionation of the voluminous SMO magmas and assimilation of the lower crust.more » « less
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Abstract Iceland's oldest silicic rocks provide unique insight into the island's early crustal evolution. We present new zircon U‐Pb ages bolstered with zircon trace element and isotopic compositions, and whole rock Nd, Hf, and Pb isotope compositions, from three silicic magmatic centers—Hrafnsfjörður, Árnes, and Kaldalón—to understand the petrogenesis of large silicic volcanic centers in the northern Westfjords, Iceland. Our data confirm Hrafnsfjörður as the oldest known central volcano in Iceland (∼14 Ma) and establish an older age for Árnes (∼13 Ma) than previously estimated. We also report the first U‐Pb zircon dates from Kaldalón (∼13.5 Ma). Zircon oxygen isotope compositions range from δ18O∼+2 to +4‰ and indicate involvement of a low‐18O component in their source magmas. Hrafnsfjörður zircon Hf (mean sampleεHf∼ +15.3–16.0) and whole rock Hf and Nd (εHf = +14.5 to +15;εNd = +7.9 to +8.1) isotopic compositions are more radiogenic than those from Árnes (zircon sampleεHf∼ +11.8–13; whole rockεHf = +12.8 to +15.1;εNd = +7.3 to +7.7), but Hrafnsfjörður whole rock Pb isotope compositions (208/204Pb = 37.95–37.96;206/204Pb = 18.33–18.35) are less radiogenic than those from Árnes (208/204Pb = 38.34–38.48;206/204Pb = 18.64–18.78). Kaldalón has zircon Hf isotope compositions ofεHf∼+14.8 and 15.5 (sample means). These age and isotopic differences suggest that interaction of rift and plume, and thus the geodynamic evolution of the Westfjords, is complex. Isotopic compositions of Hrafnsfjörður and Árnes support involvement of an enriched mantle (EM)‐like mantle component associated with a pulsing plume that resulted in variable spreading rates and magma fluxes and highlight the heterogeneity of the Icelandic mantle.more » « less
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Abstract Ophiolite metamorphic soles preserve important records of ophiolite emplacement, but there have been few detailed investigations into their non‐mafic portions. We present new thermobarometric and petrochronologic data from a metasediment and mafic restite in the upper Wadi Tayin sole exposure in the Samail (Oman‐UAE) Ophiolite. Thermodynamic modeling suggests metasedimentary garnet nucleation at ~4 kb, ~550°C and final growth at 7.5 ± 1.2 kbar, 665 ± 32°C, occurring by 93.0 ± 0.5 Ma (Lu‐Hf isochron). Zircon U‐Pb dates of 106.9 ± 2.3 (detrital) and 98.7 ± 1.7 to 94.1 ± 1.6 Ma (metamorphic) bracket the initiation of metamorphism, and monazite U‐Pb dates from ~97–89 Ma suggest a lengthy period of growth or recrystallization. A mafic titanite U‐Pb age of 92.2 ± 1.8 Ma records the earliest possible juxtaposition of high‐ and lower‐grade sole rocks. These and other data suggest that (i) the Wadi Tayin sole preserves an inverted metamorphic, metasomatic, and age gradient,(ii) metasediment metamorphism occurred during, or soon after, crystallization of the overlying ophiolite (≤96.5 Ma); and (iii) sole metasediments define a thermal gradient continuous with hotter, higher‐Pamphibolites. Some of these data conflict with existing models for sole formation, and we propose several hypotheses to explain them. Cooling of the sole below Ar closure by ~92 Ma suggests that strain rapidly partitioned away from the sole, leading to large‐scale, thin‐skinned thrust emplacement of the ophiolite >100 km across the continental margin and the late, cool underthrusting of the continental margin.more » « less