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Keywords = extensional dome

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20 pages, 4829 KiB  
Article
Structural and Kinematic Analysis of the Xipu Dome in the Tingri Area, Southern Tibet, and New Exploration Discoveries
by Songtao Yan, Ailing Ding, Jie Wang, Hao Huang, Hu Li, Song Chen, Tao Liu and Lidong Zhu
Minerals 2024, 14(12), 1188; https://doi.org/10.3390/min14121188 - 22 Nov 2024
Viewed by 945
Abstract
The newly delineated Xipu Dome, located in the central North Himalayan Gneiss Dome (NHGD), exhibits a significant spatiotemporal relationship with Himalayan polymetallic mineralization. Based on field geological surveys and geochronological analyses, this study provides a comprehensive assessment of the lithological assemblage, tectonic deformation, [...] Read more.
The newly delineated Xipu Dome, located in the central North Himalayan Gneiss Dome (NHGD), exhibits a significant spatiotemporal relationship with Himalayan polymetallic mineralization. Based on field geological surveys and geochronological analyses, this study provides a comprehensive assessment of the lithological assemblage, tectonic deformation, and metallogenic processes of the Xipu Dome. The findings reveal a three-tiered structure: the core consists of early Paleozoic granitic gneiss (523 Ma) and Miocene leucogranite (13.5 Ma), overlain by a cover of low-grade metamorphic or unmetamorphosed sedimentary rocks, and a detachment zone composed of heavily deformed schists and phyllites. The Xipu Dome underwent three phases of tectonic deformation: a southward thrust caused by continental collision, northward extensional activity driven by the South Tibet Detachment System (STDS), and gravitational collapse and downslope sliding following the emplacement of the dome. Two types of mineralization were identified: structural hydrothermal Au-Cu polymetallic deposits related to detachment and skarn-type Cu-Ag polymetallic deposits associated with leucogranite intrusion. This study enhances the understanding of the spatial distribution and metallogenic potential within the Himalayan Be-Sn rare metal-Pb-Zn-Sb-Au belt, offering a valuable direction for strategic mineral exploration in the Tethyan Himalaya (TH). Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Mineral Exploration Methods and Applications)
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23 pages, 11414 KiB  
Article
Mineralogy and Geochemistry of Upper Miocene Igneous Rocks, Kos Island, Greece: Extension during Strike-Slip Faulting and Subduction Rollback
by Georgia Pe-Piper, David J. W. Piper and Nikolaos Tsoukalas
Minerals 2024, 14(10), 989; https://doi.org/10.3390/min14100989 - 30 Sep 2024
Viewed by 1442
Abstract
Upper Miocene volcanic and plutonic rocks on Kos island preserve a record of magmatic and tectonic events in the transition zone between the Aegean and Anatolian microplates. Their field setting, syn-intrusion deformation, mineralogy, and geochemistry were investigated. Volcanic rocks, including trachyandesite flows and [...] Read more.
Upper Miocene volcanic and plutonic rocks on Kos island preserve a record of magmatic and tectonic events in the transition zone between the Aegean and Anatolian microplates. Their field setting, syn-intrusion deformation, mineralogy, and geochemistry were investigated. Volcanic rocks, including trachyandesite flows and trachyandesite to rhyolite domes, were extruded on a central E–W horst and directly overlie Alpine basement. Thick successions of trachytic flow tuffs are interbedded with fluvial and lacustrine basinal sediments to the south of this horst. Volcanism was synchronous with the emplacement of the Dikeos monzonite pluton, which is geochemically similar to some lithic clasts in the thick flow tuffs and is cut by mafic dykes including lamprophyres. Two main types of mafic magma were present: a K-rich lamprophyric magma that evolved to trachyandesite and more calc-alkaline magma similar to mafic enclaves in the monzonite. Syn-intrusion structures in the monzonite indicate emplacement during E–W sinistral strike-slip faulting that created local transtensional deformation, providing accommodation for a Dikeos magma reservoir. A change in the style of deformation in the Late Miocene led to NW-striking extension in the footwall, occupied by mafic dykes and mineralized veins, and extensional detachment of the hanging wall, resulting in unroofing of the monzonite. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Mineral Geochemistry and Geochronology)
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16 pages, 5990 KiB  
Review
The Geological and Tectonic Evolution of Feni, Papua New Guinea
by Olive L. Ponyalou, Michael G. Petterson and Joseph O. Espi
Geosciences 2023, 13(9), 257; https://doi.org/10.3390/geosciences13090257 - 24 Aug 2023
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 6190
Abstract
Feni is located at the southeastern end of the NW-trending Tabar–Lihir–Tanga–Feni (TLTF) volcanic island chain, in northeastern Papua New Guinea. This island chain is renowned for hosting alkaline volcanics, geothermal activity, copper–gold mineralization, and mining. There is no agreed consensus on the tectonic [...] Read more.
Feni is located at the southeastern end of the NW-trending Tabar–Lihir–Tanga–Feni (TLTF) volcanic island chain, in northeastern Papua New Guinea. This island chain is renowned for hosting alkaline volcanics, geothermal activity, copper–gold mineralization, and mining. There is no agreed consensus on the tectonic and petrogenetic evolution of Feni. Thus, the purpose of our paper is to present the geology of Feni within the context of the regional tectonic evolution of the TLTF chain and offer a succinct and generic geodynamic model that sets the stage for our next paper. The methodologies used in this study include a critical review of published and unpublished literature in conjunction with our geological observations on Feni. The Pliocene-to-Holocene TLTF chain is a younger arc situated within the greater Eocene-to-Oligocene Melanesian Arc bounded by New Ireland to the west, the Kilinailau Trench and Ontong Java Plateau in the east, and the New Britain Trench to the south. The geological units mapped on Feni include a large volume of basaltic lava flow and trachyandesite stocks intruding a limestone and siltstone basement. Younger units include the trachyte domes, pyroclastic flow, and ash fall deposits. The major structures on Feni are normal or extensional faults such as the Niffin Graben. Feni magmatism is attributed to the petrogenetic processes of polybaric or decompression melting and crystal fractionation of magmas previously influenced by sediment assimilation, mantle wedge metasomatism, slab tears, slab melts, and subduction. Deep lithospheric normal faults provide the fluid pathways for the Feni alkaline magmas. Full article
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21 pages, 32295 KiB  
Article
The Mesozoic Tectonic Transition from Compression to Extension in the South China Block: Insight from Structural Deformation of the Lushan Massif, SE China
by Fan Yang, Chuanzhong Song, Shenglian Ren and Meihua Ji
Minerals 2022, 12(12), 1531; https://doi.org/10.3390/min12121531 - 29 Nov 2022
Cited by 4 | Viewed by 2319
Abstract
The Lushan Massif has been considered an extensional dome which represents a typical extensional structure in South China. However, the composition and structure of the Lushan Massif are still unclear. In this study, we identified the eastern detachment fault (EDF) for the first [...] Read more.
The Lushan Massif has been considered an extensional dome which represents a typical extensional structure in South China. However, the composition and structure of the Lushan Massif are still unclear. In this study, we identified the eastern detachment fault (EDF) for the first time. In addition, many sinistral strike-slip structures have also been recognized in the Lushan area, such as the Xingzi shear zone (XZSZ) and Lianhua shear zone (LHSZ). Detailed field observation and structural analysis revealed that the former sinistral faults are tectonic boundaries of the later Lushan extensional dome (LSED). The tectonic evolution sequence was established after the structural analysis combined with zircon U-Pb dating and mica 40Ar-39Ar dating of metamorphic rocks, veins, and intrusive rocks from the strike-slip fault and detachment fault. The Lushan Massif has undergone sinistral ductile shearing within 162–150 Ma. The LSED was then formed in an extensional tectonic setting from 140 to 114 Ma. Together with the regional geological setting, we believe that the sinistral strike-slip structures, represented by the XZSZ and LHSZ, are coeval with the Tanlu fault system and could be controlled by a transpressional stress field resulting from the subduction of the Pacific Plate. The LSED was formed in a back-arc extension setting resulting from the rollback of a subducted slab. The tectonic transition from compression to extension in the South China Block took place at 150–140 Ma. Full article
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22 pages, 8910 KiB  
Article
Changing Carboniferous Arc Magmatism in the Ossa-Morena Zone (Southwest Iberia): Implications for the Variscan Belt
by Manuel Francisco Pereira, José Manuel Fuenlabrada, Carmen Rodríguez and António Castro
Minerals 2022, 12(5), 597; https://doi.org/10.3390/min12050597 - 9 May 2022
Cited by 6 | Viewed by 2912
Abstract
Carboniferous magmatism in southwestern Iberia was continuously active for more than 60 m.y. during the development of the Appalachian-Variscan belt of North America, North Africa and Western-Central Europe. This collisional orogen that records the closure of the Rheic Ocean is essential to understanding [...] Read more.
Carboniferous magmatism in southwestern Iberia was continuously active for more than 60 m.y. during the development of the Appalachian-Variscan belt of North America, North Africa and Western-Central Europe. This collisional orogen that records the closure of the Rheic Ocean is essential to understanding the late Paleozoic amalgamation of the Pangea supercontinent. However, the oblique convergence between Laurussia and Gondwana that lasted from the Devonian to the Carboniferous was likely more complex. Recently, a new tectonic model has regarded the Iberia Variscan belt as the site of coeval collisional and accretionary orogenic processes. Early Carboniferous plutonic rocks of southwest Iberia indicate arc magmatism in Gondwana. The Ossa-Morena Zone (OMZ) acted as the upper plate in relation to the geometry of the Paleotethys subduction. This active accretionary-extensional margin was progressively involved in a collisional phase during the Late Carboniferous. Together, the Évora Massif and the Beja Igneous Complex include three successive stages of bimodal magmatism, with a chemical composition indicative of a long-lived subduction process lasting from the Tournaisian to the Moscovian in the OMZ. The earliest stage of arc magmatism includes the Tournaisian Beja and Torrão gabbro-dioritic rocks of the Layered Gabbroic Sequence. We present new geochemical and Nd isotopic and U-Pb geochronological data for magmatic rocks from the Main (Visean-Serpukhovian) and Latest (Bashkirian-Moscovian) stages of arc magmatism. Visean Toca da Moura trachyandesite and rhyolites and Bashkirian Baleizão porphyries and Alcáçovas quartz diorite share enriched, continental-crust like characteristics, as indicated by major and trace elements, mainly suggesting the addition of calc-alkaline magma extracted from various mantle sources in a subduction-related setting (i.e., Paleotethys subduction). New U-Pb zircon geochronology data have allowed us to establish a crystallization age of 317 ± 3 Ma (Bashkirian) for Alcáçovas quartz diorite that confirms a temporal link with Baleizão porphyry. Positive εNd(t) values for the Carboniferous igneous rocks of the Beja Igneous Complex and the Évora gneiss dome indicate production of new juvenile crust, whereas negative εNd(t) values also suggest different grades of magma evolution involving crustal contamination. The production and evolution of Carboniferous continental crust in the OMZ was most likely associated with the development of an active continental margin during the convergence of the Paleotethys Ocean with Gondwana, involving juvenile materials and different grades of crustal contamination. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Petrology and Geochemistry of Igneous Complexes and Formations)
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23 pages, 10409 KiB  
Article
Construction and Destruction of Bontău Composite Volcano in the Extensional Setting of Zărand Basin during Miocene (Apuseni Mts., Romania)
by Ioan Seghedi, Viorel M. Mirea and Gabriel C. Ștefan
Minerals 2022, 12(2), 243; https://doi.org/10.3390/min12020243 - 14 Feb 2022
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 2559
Abstract
The Eastern part of the Miocene Zărand extensional basin witnessed the generation and evolution of the largest composite volcano in Apuseni Mts., named recently Bontău. The volcano is filling the basin at the junction between the South and North Apuseni Mountains. The Bontău [...] Read more.
The Eastern part of the Miocene Zărand extensional basin witnessed the generation and evolution of the largest composite volcano in Apuseni Mts., named recently Bontău. The volcano is filling the basin at the junction between the South and North Apuseni Mountains. The Bontău Volcano is known to be active roughly between ~14–10. In spite of heavily forested and poorly exposed volcanic deposits, it was possible to identify its complex evolution. The volcano suggests an original oval-shaped edifice base currently showing a north-oriented horseshoe-shaped debris avalanche eroded crater. The early effusive volcanic activity was contemporaneous with the emplacement of individual and/or clustered volcanic lava Domes. Late-stage summit dome generation was followed by several volcanic collapses all around the volcanic edifice producing large volcanic debris avalanche deposits (DADs), accompanied by numerous debris flows all around the volcano periphery. Thick pumice pyroclastic flow deposits found below DADs at the periphery may suggest that the slope failures were proceeded by a Plinian eruption. The debris avalanche crater is the last event in the volcano evolution exposing several intrusive andesitic-dioritic bodies and associated hydrothermal and mineralization processes, most probably including the former central vent area of the volcano. The volcano proximal effusive and explosive deposits display a change in the composition of the erupting magma (increased SiO2 from 53.4% to 60.6%) that resulted in an increase of viscosity and the construction of the summit lava domes. Such domes are however only found as various size blocks in DADs. The volcanism connects with the two steps of geotectonic evolution of the Zărand Basin: The initial construction period during regional extension started ~16 Ma up to 12.3–12.1 when the Bontău volcano and surrounding domes were generated. The second period, younger than 12 Ma, corresponds to NW-SE compressional tectonics developed only in the Bontău volcano with summit dome generation and, finally, assists volcano destruction and DADs generation. Newly performed geochemical and Sr and Nd isotopic data studies attest to a calc-alkaline character and suggest an evolution via assimilation-fractional crystallization processes of a dominant MORB-like mantle source magma. Also, they confirm the amphibole (±pyroxene) andesites to be the most evolved lithology. The stepwise changes in fracture propagation in the Zărand extensional setting along with a change to more hydrated and fractionated magma favored in ~4 Myrs of the evolution of the Bontău volcano lead to multiple pulses of the longest-lived magma chamber in the whole Miocene volcanism of the Apuseni Mts. Full article
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