The Cenozoic igneous activity of Sardinia is essentially concentrated in the 38-0.1 Myr time range. On the basis of volcanological, petrographic, mineralogical, geochemical and isotopic considerations, two main rock types can be defined. The first group, here defined SR (subduction-related) comprises Late Eocene-Middle Miocene (similar to 38-15 Ma) igneous rocks, essentially developed along the Sardinian Trough, a N-S oriented graben developed during the Late Oligocene-Middle Miocene. The climax of magmatism is recorded during the Early Miocene (similar to 23-18 Ma) with minor activity before and after this time range. Major and trace element indicators, as well as Sr-Nd-Pb-Hf-Os-O isotope systematic indicate complex petrogenetic processes including subduction-related metasomatism, variable degrees of crustal contamination at shallow depths, fractional crystallization and basic rock partial melting. Hybridization processes between mantle and crustal melts and between pure mantle and crustally contaminated mantle melts increased the isotopic and elemental variability of the composition of the evolved (intermediate to acid) melts. The earliest igneous activity, pre-dating the Early Miocene magmatic climax, is related to the pushing effects exerted by the Alpine Tethys over the Hercynian or older lower crust, rather than to dehydration processes of the oceanic plate itself. The second group comprises volcanic rocks emplaced from similar to 12 to similar to 0.1 Ma. The major and, partially, trace element content of these rocks roughly resemble magmas emplaced in within-plate tectonic settings. From a Sr-Nd-Pb-Hf-Os isotopic point of view, it is possible to subdivide these rocks into two subgroups. The first, defined RPV (Radiogenic Pb Volcanic) group comprises the oldest and very rare products (similar to 12-4.4 Ma) occurring only in the southern sectors of Sardinia. The second group, defined UPV (Unradiogenic Pb Volcanic), comprises rocks emplaced in the remaining central and northern sectors during the similar to 4.8-0.1 Ma time range. The origin of the RPV rocks remains quite enigmatic, since they formed just a few Myr after the end of a subduction-related igneous activity but do not show any evidence of slab-derived metasomatic effects. In contrast, the complex origin of the mafic UPV rocks, characterized by low Pb-206/Pb-204 (17.4-18.1), low Nd-143/Nd-144 (0.51232-0.51264), low Hf-176/Hf-177 (0.28258-0.28280), mildly radiogenic Sr-87/Sr-86 (similar to 0.7044) and radiogenic Os-187/Os-188 ratios (0.125-0.160) can be explained with a mantle source modified after interaction with ancient delaminated lower crustal lithologies. The strong isotopic difference between the RPV and UPV magmas and the absence of lower crustal-related features in the SR and RPV remain aspects to be solved. (C) 2013 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Origin and evolution of Cenozoic magmatism of Sardinia (Italy). A combined isotopic (Sr-Nd-Pb-O-Hf-Os) and petrological view / Lustrino, Michele; Lorenzo, Fedele; Leone, Melluso; Vincenzo, Morra; Fiorenzo, Ronga; Jorg, Geldmacher; Svend, Duggen; Samuele, Agostini; Ciro, Cucciniello; Luigi, Franciosi; Thomas, Meisel. - In: LITHOS. - ISSN 0024-4937. - STAMPA. - 180-181:(2013), pp. 138-158. [10.1016/j.lithos.2013.08.022]

Origin and evolution of Cenozoic magmatism of Sardinia (Italy). A combined isotopic (Sr-Nd-Pb-O-Hf-Os) and petrological view

LUSTRINO, Michele;
2013

Abstract

The Cenozoic igneous activity of Sardinia is essentially concentrated in the 38-0.1 Myr time range. On the basis of volcanological, petrographic, mineralogical, geochemical and isotopic considerations, two main rock types can be defined. The first group, here defined SR (subduction-related) comprises Late Eocene-Middle Miocene (similar to 38-15 Ma) igneous rocks, essentially developed along the Sardinian Trough, a N-S oriented graben developed during the Late Oligocene-Middle Miocene. The climax of magmatism is recorded during the Early Miocene (similar to 23-18 Ma) with minor activity before and after this time range. Major and trace element indicators, as well as Sr-Nd-Pb-Hf-Os-O isotope systematic indicate complex petrogenetic processes including subduction-related metasomatism, variable degrees of crustal contamination at shallow depths, fractional crystallization and basic rock partial melting. Hybridization processes between mantle and crustal melts and between pure mantle and crustally contaminated mantle melts increased the isotopic and elemental variability of the composition of the evolved (intermediate to acid) melts. The earliest igneous activity, pre-dating the Early Miocene magmatic climax, is related to the pushing effects exerted by the Alpine Tethys over the Hercynian or older lower crust, rather than to dehydration processes of the oceanic plate itself. The second group comprises volcanic rocks emplaced from similar to 12 to similar to 0.1 Ma. The major and, partially, trace element content of these rocks roughly resemble magmas emplaced in within-plate tectonic settings. From a Sr-Nd-Pb-Hf-Os isotopic point of view, it is possible to subdivide these rocks into two subgroups. The first, defined RPV (Radiogenic Pb Volcanic) group comprises the oldest and very rare products (similar to 12-4.4 Ma) occurring only in the southern sectors of Sardinia. The second group, defined UPV (Unradiogenic Pb Volcanic), comprises rocks emplaced in the remaining central and northern sectors during the similar to 4.8-0.1 Ma time range. The origin of the RPV rocks remains quite enigmatic, since they formed just a few Myr after the end of a subduction-related igneous activity but do not show any evidence of slab-derived metasomatic effects. In contrast, the complex origin of the mafic UPV rocks, characterized by low Pb-206/Pb-204 (17.4-18.1), low Nd-143/Nd-144 (0.51232-0.51264), low Hf-176/Hf-177 (0.28258-0.28280), mildly radiogenic Sr-87/Sr-86 (similar to 0.7044) and radiogenic Os-187/Os-188 ratios (0.125-0.160) can be explained with a mantle source modified after interaction with ancient delaminated lower crustal lithologies. The strong isotopic difference between the RPV and UPV magmas and the absence of lower crustal-related features in the SR and RPV remain aspects to be solved. (C) 2013 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
2013
geodynamics; petrology; sardinia; subduction magmatism; mediterranean; tectonics; subduction; geochemistry
01 Pubblicazione su rivista::01a Articolo in rivista
Origin and evolution of Cenozoic magmatism of Sardinia (Italy). A combined isotopic (Sr-Nd-Pb-O-Hf-Os) and petrological view / Lustrino, Michele; Lorenzo, Fedele; Leone, Melluso; Vincenzo, Morra; Fiorenzo, Ronga; Jorg, Geldmacher; Svend, Duggen; Samuele, Agostini; Ciro, Cucciniello; Luigi, Franciosi; Thomas, Meisel. - In: LITHOS. - ISSN 0024-4937. - STAMPA. - 180-181:(2013), pp. 138-158. [10.1016/j.lithos.2013.08.022]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11573/541548
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