Magmatic flare-up causes crustal thickening at the transition from subduction to continental collision

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Date

Authors

Ganade de Araujo, Carlos
Lanari, Pierre
Rubatto, Daniela
Hermann, Joerg
Weinberg, R
Basei, Miguel Angelo Stipp
Tesser, Lucas R
Caby, Renaud
Agbossoumonde, Yao
Ribeiro, Caroline M

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Nature Publishing Group

Abstract

Above subduction zones, magma production rate and crustal generation can increase by an order of magnitude during narrow time intervals known as magmatic flare-ups. However, the consequences of these events in the deep arc environment remain poorly understood. Here we use petrological and in-situ zircon dating techniques to investigate the root of a continental arc within the collisional West Gondwana Orogen that is now exposed in the Kabye Massif, Togo. We show that gabbros intruded 670 million years ago at 20-25km depth were transformed to eclogites by 620 million years ago at 65-70km depth. This was coeval with extensive magmatism at 20-40km depth, indicative of a flare-up event which peaked just prior to the subduction of the continental margin. We propose that increased H2O flux from subduction of serpentinized mantle in the hyper-extended margin of the approaching continent was responsible for the increased magma productivity and crustal thickening. Dehydration of serpentinised mantle during subduction of the hyper-extended margin of an approaching continent drove a magmatic flare-up which caused crustal thickening recorded in the Kabye Massif, Togo, according to petrological and geochronological analyses.

Description

Keywords

Citation

Source

Communications Earth & Environment

Book Title

Entity type

Access Statement

Open Access

License Rights

Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License

Restricted until

Downloads