TY - JOUR
T1 - A mantle-plume trigger for one of Earth's largest Precambrian silicic large igneous provinces in the Amazonian Craton
AU - Ibanez-Mejia, Mauricio
AU - Ernst, Richard E.
AU - Kroonenberg, Salomon
AU - Urbani, Franco
AU - Soederlund, Ulf
AU - Kamo, Sandra
AU - Lewis, Madeline
AU - Eddy, Michael P.
AU - Maclennan, Scott A.
AU - Antonio, Paul
AU - Mason, Paul R. D.
AU - El Bilali, Hafida
PY - 2025/5/9
Y1 - 2025/5/9
N2 - The Amazonian Craton is host to one of Earth's largest Proterozoic silicic large igneous provinces (SLIPs), the Orocaima SLIP (ca. 1.98 Ga). Nevertheless, the mechanism(s) responsible for this large-flux felsic magmatic event and its relationships with regional tectonics and/or mantle processes remain debated. New geochronologic and geochemical results from multiple mafic dike swarms in the Amazonian Craton, namely the Guaniamo, Rio Aro, El Manteco-Supamo, and Goboy swarms, reveal a close temporal, spatial, and geochemical association with the Orocaima SLIP. The radiating arrangement of these swarms spanning 90 degrees of arc, their strongly tholeiitic geochemical affinity, and their short-lived emplacement ca. 1.98 Ga including in regions far from any inferred subducting plate margins all strongly suggest: (1) an intraplate, plume-related origin, and (2) a radiating arrangement defining a plume center located at similar to 2.5 degrees N, 61.2 degrees W, near the SW margin of proto-Amazonia at the time and coinciding with the location of the Takutu graben. Discovery of this previously unrecognized radiating swarm array, herein grouped within a proposed Yanomami large igneous province, and its close spatial and temporal association with the Orocaima SLIP suggests a plume-triggered origin for SLIP development, thus arguing against accretionary models for the origin of the Orocaima silicic magmatic belt.
AB - The Amazonian Craton is host to one of Earth's largest Proterozoic silicic large igneous provinces (SLIPs), the Orocaima SLIP (ca. 1.98 Ga). Nevertheless, the mechanism(s) responsible for this large-flux felsic magmatic event and its relationships with regional tectonics and/or mantle processes remain debated. New geochronologic and geochemical results from multiple mafic dike swarms in the Amazonian Craton, namely the Guaniamo, Rio Aro, El Manteco-Supamo, and Goboy swarms, reveal a close temporal, spatial, and geochemical association with the Orocaima SLIP. The radiating arrangement of these swarms spanning 90 degrees of arc, their strongly tholeiitic geochemical affinity, and their short-lived emplacement ca. 1.98 Ga including in regions far from any inferred subducting plate margins all strongly suggest: (1) an intraplate, plume-related origin, and (2) a radiating arrangement defining a plume center located at similar to 2.5 degrees N, 61.2 degrees W, near the SW margin of proto-Amazonia at the time and coinciding with the location of the Takutu graben. Discovery of this previously unrecognized radiating swarm array, herein grouped within a proposed Yanomami large igneous province, and its close spatial and temporal association with the Orocaima SLIP suggests a plume-triggered origin for SLIP development, thus arguing against accretionary models for the origin of the Orocaima silicic magmatic belt.
KW - Mafic magmatism
KW - Guiana shield
KW - Surinam
KW - Crust
UR - https://www.webofscience.com/api/gateway?GWVersion=2&SrcApp=d7dz6a2i7wiom976oc9ff2iqvdhv8k5x&SrcAuth=WosAPI&KeyUT=WOS:001511765600001&DestLinkType=FullRecord&DestApp=WOS_CPL
U2 - 10.1130/G53164.1
DO - 10.1130/G53164.1
M3 - Article
SN - 0091-7613
JO - Geology
JF - Geology
ER -