Petrologic Significance of Multiple Magmas in the Quottoon Igneous Complex, NW British Columbia and SE Alaska
The quartz dioritic Quottoon Igneous Complex (QIC) is a major Paleogene (65-56 Ma) magmatic body in NW British Columbia and SE Alaska that was emplaced along the Coast shear zone (CSZ). The QIC contains two different igneous suites that provide information about source regions, magmatic processes a...
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ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-367952020-09-29T05:40:55Z Petrologic Significance of Multiple Magmas in the Quottoon Igneous Complex, NW British Columbia and SE Alaska Thomas, Jay Bradley Jr. Geological Sciences Sinha, A. Krishna Sinha, A. Krishna Crawford, Maria L. Beard, James S. Quottoon pluton quartz diorite tonalite magma British Columbia Alaska petrography major elements trace elements rare earth elements geochemistry Sr isotopes geochemical modeling Great Tonalite Sill The quartz dioritic Quottoon Igneous Complex (QIC) is a major Paleogene (65-56 Ma) magmatic body in NW British Columbia and SE Alaska that was emplaced along the Coast shear zone (CSZ). The QIC contains two different igneous suites that provide information about source regions, magmatic processes and evolving tectonic regimes that changed from a dominantly convergent to a dominantly strike-slip regime between 65 to 55 Ma. Heterogeneous suite I rocks (e. g. along Steamer Passage) have a pervasive solid-state fabric, abundant mafic enclaves and dikes, metasedimentary screens, and variable color indices (25-50). The homogeneous suite II rocks (e. g. along Quottoon Inlet) have a weak (to absent) fabric developed in the magmatic state (aligned feldspars, melt filled shears), and more uniform color indices (24-34) than in suite I. Suite I rocks have Sr concentrations <750 ppm, avg. LaN/YbN = 10.4, and initial 87Sr/86Sr ratios that range from 0.70513 to 0.70717. The suite II rocks have Sr concentrations >750 ppm, avg. LaN/YbN = 23.1, and initial 87Sr/86Sr ratios that range from 0.70617 to 0.70686. This study proposes that the parental QIC magma (initial 87Sr/86Sr = 0.706) can be derived bypartial melting of an amphibolitic source reservoir at lower crustal conditions. Geochemical data (Rb, Sr, Ba and LaN/YbN) and initial 87Sr/86Sr ratios preclude linkages between the two suites by fractional crystallization or assimilation and fractional crystallization (AFC) processes. The suite I rocks are interpreted to be the result of magma mixing between the QIC parental magma and a mantle derived magma. The samples do not lie along a single mixing line due to continued evolution through fractional crystallization/AFC processes subsequent to magma mixing. The suite II rocks may be generated by AFC. Initial 87Sr/86Sr ratio data suggests that similar processes to those that affected the QIC may also have operated during the generation of other portions of the Great Tonalite Sill of southeast Alaska. Master of Science 2014-03-14T20:51:50Z 2014-03-14T20:51:50Z 1998-05-18 1998-05-18 1999-06-26 1998-06-26 Thesis etd-52598-142754 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/36795 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-52598-142754/ JTHESIS2.pdf In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ application/pdf Virginia Tech |
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Quottoon pluton quartz diorite tonalite magma British Columbia Alaska petrography major elements trace elements rare earth elements geochemistry Sr isotopes geochemical modeling Great Tonalite Sill |
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Quottoon pluton quartz diorite tonalite magma British Columbia Alaska petrography major elements trace elements rare earth elements geochemistry Sr isotopes geochemical modeling Great Tonalite Sill Thomas, Jay Bradley Jr. Petrologic Significance of Multiple Magmas in the Quottoon Igneous Complex, NW British Columbia and SE Alaska |
description |
The quartz dioritic Quottoon Igneous Complex (QIC) is a major Paleogene (65-56 Ma) magmatic body in NW British Columbia and SE Alaska that was emplaced along the Coast shear zone (CSZ). The QIC contains two different igneous suites that provide information about source regions, magmatic processes and evolving tectonic regimes that changed from a dominantly convergent to a dominantly strike-slip regime between 65 to 55 Ma. Heterogeneous suite I rocks (e. g. along Steamer Passage) have a pervasive solid-state fabric, abundant mafic enclaves and dikes, metasedimentary screens, and variable color indices (25-50). The homogeneous suite II rocks (e. g. along Quottoon Inlet) have a weak (to absent) fabric developed in the magmatic state (aligned feldspars, melt filled shears), and more uniform color indices (24-34) than in suite I. Suite I rocks have Sr concentrations <750 ppm, avg. LaN/YbN = 10.4, and initial 87Sr/86Sr ratios that range from 0.70513 to 0.70717. The suite II rocks have Sr concentrations >750 ppm, avg. LaN/YbN = 23.1, and initial 87Sr/86Sr ratios that range from 0.70617 to 0.70686. This study proposes that the parental QIC magma (initial 87Sr/86Sr = 0.706) can be derived bypartial melting of an amphibolitic source reservoir at lower crustal conditions. Geochemical data (Rb, Sr, Ba and LaN/YbN) and initial 87Sr/86Sr ratios preclude linkages between the two suites by fractional crystallization or assimilation and fractional crystallization (AFC) processes. The suite I rocks are interpreted to be the result of magma mixing between the QIC parental magma and a mantle derived magma. The samples do not lie along a single mixing line due to continued evolution through fractional crystallization/AFC processes subsequent to magma mixing. The suite II rocks may be generated by AFC. Initial 87Sr/86Sr ratio data suggests that similar processes to those that affected the QIC may also have operated during the generation of other portions of the Great Tonalite Sill of southeast Alaska. === Master of Science |
author2 |
Geological Sciences |
author_facet |
Geological Sciences Thomas, Jay Bradley Jr. |
author |
Thomas, Jay Bradley Jr. |
author_sort |
Thomas, Jay Bradley Jr. |
title |
Petrologic Significance of Multiple Magmas in the Quottoon Igneous Complex, NW British Columbia and SE Alaska |
title_short |
Petrologic Significance of Multiple Magmas in the Quottoon Igneous Complex, NW British Columbia and SE Alaska |
title_full |
Petrologic Significance of Multiple Magmas in the Quottoon Igneous Complex, NW British Columbia and SE Alaska |
title_fullStr |
Petrologic Significance of Multiple Magmas in the Quottoon Igneous Complex, NW British Columbia and SE Alaska |
title_full_unstemmed |
Petrologic Significance of Multiple Magmas in the Quottoon Igneous Complex, NW British Columbia and SE Alaska |
title_sort |
petrologic significance of multiple magmas in the quottoon igneous complex, nw british columbia and se alaska |
publisher |
Virginia Tech |
publishDate |
2014 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/10919/36795 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-52598-142754/ |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT thomasjaybradleyjr petrologicsignificanceofmultiplemagmasinthequottoonigneouscomplexnwbritishcolumbiaandsealaska |
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1719344850053103616 |