The unique Cambro-Ordovician silicic large igneous province of NW Gondwana: Catastrophic melting of a thinned crust
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Elsevier
Abstract
Cambro–Ordovician silicic magmatism in the Central Iberian Zone of the Iberian Massif (Ollo de Sapo
Formation, OSF) constitutes a voluminous and geochemically atypical magmatic event that formed preceding the breakup of the northern margin of Gondwana. To date, and due to uncommon geochemical
signatures, such as a high Fe, Mg content compared to anatectic melts and the departing from the
calc-alkaline trends, the origin of such magmatic event is not fully understood. Herein, we report a
data-analysis of geochemistry linking magmas and source compositions. The analysis of the combined
data from multiple studies ascribes the geochemistry of the OSF rocks to a combination of extensive melting of Ediacaran metasiliciclastic rocks and a Ca-rich component. It is hypothesized that fluids released by
crystallization of mafic magmas contributed to partial melting of a thick metasedimentary pile represented by Ediacaran siliciclastic rocks. Such melting event gave rise to a mobile nebulite or migma, which
was able to extrude and form the super-eruption or ‘‘flare-up” that characterizes Cambro-Ordovician silicic magmatism at the Gondwana margin. Fast, catastrophic crustal melting with large-scale restite
entrainment, triggered by the influx of mafic magma-derived fluids, are considered the main cause of
the unique features of this Cambro-Ordovician atypical silicic large igneous province of Gondwana.
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Rodríguez, C., Castro, A., Gómez-Frutos, D., Gutiérrez-Alonso, G., PEREIRA, M.F., Fernández, C., (2022). The unique Cambro-Ordovician silicic large igneous province of NW Gondwana: Catastrophic melting of a thinned crust. GONDWANA RESEARCH, 106, 164-173