Evidence for Low-Pressure Crustal Anatexis During the Northeast Atlantic
Break-up
Abstract
While basaltic volcanism is dominate during rifting and continental
breakup, felsic magmatism may also comprise important components of some
rift margins. During International Ocean Discovery Program (IODP)
Expedition 396 on the continental margin of Norway, a
graphite-garnet-cordierite bearing dacitic, pyroclastic unit was
recovered within early Eocene sediments on Mimir High (Site U1570), a
marginal high on the Vøring transform margin. Here, we present a
comprehensive textural, mineralogical, and petrological study of the
dacite in order to assess its melting origin and emplacement. The major
mineral phases (garnet, cordierite, quartz, plagioclase, alkali
feldspar) are hosted in a fresh rhyolitic, highly vesicular, glassy
matrix, locally mingled with sediments. The xenocrystic major element
chemistry of garnet and cordierite, the presence of zircon inclusions
with inherited cores, and thermobarometric calculations all support a
crustal metapelite origin. While most magma-rich margin models favor
crustal anatexis in the lower crust, thermobarometric calculations
performed here show that the dacite was produced at upper-crustal depths
(< 5 kbar) and high temperature (750–800 °C) with up to 3
wt% water content. In situ U-Pb analyses on zircon inclusions give a
magmatic age of 54.6 ± 1.1 Ma, revealing the emplacement of the dacite
post-dates the Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum (PETM). Our results
suggest that the opening of the North Atlantic was associated with a
phase of low-pressure, high-temperature crustal melting at the onset of
the main phase of magmatism.