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⁴⁰Ar/³⁹Ar geochronology of silicic and basic volcanic rocks on the margins of the North Atlantic

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Title ⁴⁰Ar/³⁹Ar geochronology of silicic and basic volcanic rocks on the margins of the North Atlantic
Names Sinton, C. W. (creator)
Hitchen, K. (creator)
Duncan, Robert A. (creator)
Date Issued 1998 (iso8601)
Abstract At the submerged margins of the North Atlantic, andesitic to dacitic and basaltic volcanic rocks
occur together. The silicic rocks were derived by processes requiring the presence of continental crust
(crustal anatexis and/or contamination of mafic magmas) while the majority of the basaltic lavas had little or
no contact with continental crust. We report ⁴⁰Ar–³⁹Ar incremental heating ages for several dacitic and
basaltic rocks recovered from three offshore localities of the North Atlantic Igneous Province. Dacitic lavas
and tuffs at the southeast Greenland margin and trachytic lavas in the Scottish Hebrides erupted contemporaneously
with basaltic lavas at 62–61 Ma. In contrast, the silicic lavas from the northern Rockall Trough
(offshore western Scotland) and the Vøring Plateau (offshore Norway) erupted at ~ 55 Ma followed shortly
by basaltic volcanism. At this time, silicic magmatism at the southeast Greenland margin had ceased and
only oceanic basalts were erupted. Similarly, ~ 55 Ma lavas on the southwest Rockall Plateau are wholly
basaltic. The compositions of all of the dated silicic volcanic rocks are consistent with derivation from partial
melting of either continental crust or sediments. The heat necessary for partial melting appears to have
been provided by basaltic magmas. Therefore, the existence of the silicic rocks indicates the presence of
continental crust as well as a stable tectonic environment that allowed the stagnation and pooling of basaltic
melts within the crust. With this in mind, it is apparent that at 62–60 Ma, both western and eastern sides of
the present North Atlantic margins were characterized by extensional environments within continental crust
that were restrictive to the passage of mafic magmas. By 55 Ma, at the time of continental breakup, the proximal
margins at southeast Greenland and the Rockall Plateau were devoid of continental crust. But the presence
of 55 Ma silicic magmatism on the eastern North Atlantic margin can be attributed to a broader zone of
magmatism and sediment-filled Mesozoic rift basins.
Genre Article
Identifier Duncan, R. A., Hitchen, K., and Sinton, C. W. (1998), ⁴⁰Ar/³⁹Ar geochronology of silicic and basic volcanic rocks on the margins of the North Atlantic. Geol. Mag., 135 (2), 161-170.

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