Timing of Tectonic and Magmatic Events in the Philippine Sea Plate since
50 Ma from High-Resolution Magnetostratigraphy of IODP Site U1438
Abstract
The Izu-Bonin-Mariana (IBM) subduction system is a key natural
laboratory providing fundamental insights into subduction dynamics and
the evolution of associated upper plate magmatism. To investigate the
processes associated with subduction initiation and the subsequent
evolution of the Philippine Sea plate, International Ocean Discovery
Program (IODP) Expedition 351 recovered a complete sedimentary sequence
and the top of the underlying volcanic basement at Site U1438 located in
a rear-arc position. This offers a unique opportunity to study for the
first time and in extreme detail the styles, products, and timing of the
volcanic events that marked the emplacement, growth, and demise of the
Kyushu-Palau volcanic arc within the IBM system. Here we report a
magnetostratigraphy for Site U1438 based on ~60,000
remanence directions isolated from 1063 archive half-core sections and
429 discrete specimens. This identified 112 well-constrained magnetic
reversals that may be correlated with the geomagnetic polarity
timescale. When combined with additional biostratigraphic and
geochronological constraints, this allows construction of a
high-resolution age model for Site U1438 and the determination of
changes in sedimentation rates during the evolution of the Kyushu-Palau
arc. These age constraints show that following subduction initiation at
~52 Ma, diffuse volcanism in both the forearc and
rear-arc preceded the initial emplacement of the Kyushu-Palau arc at
44.2 Ma, which then grew through four compositionally distinct eruptive
phases until 29.2 Ma. Rollback of the Pacific slab then triggered
rifting of the arc (29.2-24.3 Ma), leading to back-arc spreading in the
Shikoku and Parece-Vela basins.