High-Si Rhyolites and Shoshonitic Volcanics - A Late Cretaceous Bimodal Association, Noumea Basin, New Caledonia

The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
Organization:
The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
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4
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617 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1995

Abstract

The transgressive sedimentary sequence of the Noumea Basin contains rhyolitic lavas and less voluminous mafic and intermediate volcanics of shoshonitic affinities which erupted simultaneously during the late Cretaceous. The shoshonitic volcanism shows a trend froIn early mafic to younger evolved intermediate lithologies. The rhyolites are consistently calcalkaline. There is no evidence of mixing of the two magma types. The shoshonitic volcanism is the result of a short-lived subduction event related to spreading in the New Caledonia Basin and involved reactivation of an earlier esozoic subduction zone.
Citation

APA:  (1995)  High-Si Rhyolites and Shoshonitic Volcanics - A Late Cretaceous Bimodal Association, Noumea Basin, New Caledonia

MLA: High-Si Rhyolites and Shoshonitic Volcanics - A Late Cretaceous Bimodal Association, Noumea Basin, New Caledonia. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 1995.

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