Litcius/Paper detail

Onset of long-lived silicic and alkaline magmatism in eastern North America preceded Central Atlantic Magmatic Province emplacement

Sean Kinney, S. A. MacLennan, Dawid Szymanowski, C. Brenhin Keller, J. A. VanTongeren, Jacob Setera, S. J. Jaret, C. Forrest Town, Justin V. Strauss, Dwight C. Bradley, Paul E. Olsen, Blair Schoene

2022Geology20 citationsDOI

Abstract

Abstract The White Mountain magma series is the largest Mesozoic felsic igneous province on the eastern North American margin. Previous geochronology suggests that magmatism occurred over 50 m.y., with ages for the oldest units apparently coeval with the ca. 201 Ma Central Atlantic Magmatic Province, the flood basalt province associated with the end-Triassic mass extinction and the opening of the Atlantic Ocean. We use zircon U-Pb geochronology to show that emplacement of White Mountain magma series plutons was already underway at 207.5 Ma. The largest volcanic-plutonic complex, the White Mountain batholith, was emplaced episodically from ca. 198.5 Ma to ca. 180 Ma and is ~25 m.y. older than published ages suggest, and all samples we dated from the Moat Volcanics are between ca. 185 Ma and 180 Ma. The Moat Volcanics and the White Mountain batholith are broadly comagmatic, which constrains the age of a key Jurassic paleomagnetic pole. Our data indicate that a regional mantle thermal anomaly in eastern North America developed at least 5 m.y. prior to the main stage of Central Atlantic Magmatic Province flood basalt volcanism and suggest a geodynamic link between the White Mountain magma series and the Central Atlantic Magmatic Province.

Topics & Concepts

GeologyBatholithSilicicFlood basaltMagmatismGeochemistryZirconPlutonVolcanic rockIgneous rockRhyoliteGeochronologyBasaltLarge igneous provinceFelsicIsochron datingRiftVolcanoVolcanismPaleontologyIsochronStructural basinTectonicsGeological and Geochemical AnalysisHigh-pressure geophysics and materialsPaleontology and Stratigraphy of Fossils