Late Palaeozoic Metavolcanic Suites from Gympie Province: Implications for Terranes

- Organization:
- The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
- Pages:
- 6
- File Size:
- 490 KB
- Publication Date:
- Jan 1, 1990
Abstract
Tholeiitic metabasalts comprise at least five geochemically distinct mafic volcanic associations of Late Palaeozoic age within the Gympie Province, southeast Queensland. Geochemical features indicate that parental magmas of the various metavolcanic suites were generated in contrasting tectonic regimes, although each of the suites shows some affinities with eruptives from convergent plate margin settings.Basalts from the Highbury Volcanics of the Gympie Group are island arc tholeiites (IAT) formed during an immature stage of eruptive activity in an intra-oceanic arc. They are unique among the analysed metabasites in possessing high Zr/Nb (Zr/Nb - 30) and very high Ba/Nb, and as well as low Ti/V, Ti/Zr and Ti/Y. These features are explicable solely in terms of contributions from a depleted, convecting upper mantle source, and large ion lithophile element (LILE) enriched fluids ascending from subducted oceanic crust.
Citation
APA: (1990) Late Palaeozoic Metavolcanic Suites from Gympie Province: Implications for Terranes
MLA: Late Palaeozoic Metavolcanic Suites from Gympie Province: Implications for Terranes. The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 1990.