Magmatic flare-up causes crustal thickening at the transition from subduction to continental collision
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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
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Nature Publishing Group
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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.
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Communications Earth & Environment
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Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License
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