Search results for "TLE"

showing 10 items of 2417 documents

Minor and trace elements in olivines as probes into early igneous and mantle melting processes

2013

Abstract The trace element composition of olivine is a rapidly growing research area that has several applications of great potential. Mantle olivines can be distinguished from volcanic olivines by lower concentrations of Ca (

geographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryOlivine010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesContinental crustMantle metasomatismGeochemistryengineering.material010502 geochemistry & geophysics01 natural sciencesMantle (geology)Igneous rockGeophysicsVolcano13. Climate actionSpace and Planetary ScienceGeochemistry and PetrologyOceanic crustEarth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous)Trace element compositionengineeringGeology0105 earth and related environmental sciences
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Variation of olivine composition in the volcanic rocks in the Songliao basin, NE China: lithosphere control on the origin of the K-rich intraplate ma…

2016

Abstract Lithospheric thickness and the heterogeneity of the mantle lithosphere are two major parameters that play a role in determining the final composition of the mafic melts and their minerals. The Songliao basin in northeast China represents an ideal natural laboratory to study the effect of these two parameters on early Pliocene to Holocene K-rich mafic lavas (K2O > 4 wt.%; K2O/Na2O > 1). A series of Cenozoic volcanic edifices (Erkeshan, Wudalianchi, Keluo and Xiaogulihe) are tentatively divided into three groups (Group 1 — thin, Group 2 — middle, and Group 3 — thick) according to the lithosphere thickness. They are located in the northern region of the Songliao basin extending in a n…

geographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryOlivine010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesGeochemistryGeologyengineering.material010502 geochemistry & geophysics01 natural sciencesMantle (geology)Volcanic rockGeochemistry and PetrologyLithosphereengineeringPhlogopiteIgneous differentiationMetasomatismMaficGeology0105 earth and related environmental sciencesLithos
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Does second phase content control the evolution of olivine CPO type and deformation mechanisms? A case study of paired harzburgite and dunite bands i…

2021

Abstract We have examined the microstructures and crystallographic preferred orientations (CPOs) of six “paired” harzburgite and dunite samples from a small (~ 1 km2) area in the Ellis Stream Complex, Red Hills Massif, Dun Mountain ophiolite belt in New Zealand. Here, banded peridotites with isoclinal folds, E-W striking vertical foliations and vertical lineations are inferred to result from shear on vertical planes that overprint previous mantle structures. The samples contain five different olivine CPOs: typically known as A, C, D, E and AG-types. The co-located harzburgite and dunite of each pair show different CPOs (e.g., A vs E type). In each pair, dunite generally has larger grain siz…

geographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryOlivineGeochemistryGeologyMassifengineering.materialOphioliteMantle (geology)Strain partitioningLineationShear (geology)Deformation mechanismGeochemistry and PetrologyengineeringPetrologyGeologyLithos
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Lamproites as indicators of accretion and/or shallow subduction in the assembly of south-western Anatolia, Turkey

2010

IntroductionThe Western Anatolian region of Tur-key is tectonically one of the mostcomplex parts of the Alpine–Himala-yan orogenic belt (Fig. 1) because ofits long accretional palaeotectonicevolution. One of the major tectonicfeatures shaping the structure ofwestern Anatolia is the Menderesmetamorphic massif, which consistsof several assembled and imbricatedterranes exhumed during the exten-sion that affected the entire Aegeanprovince during the Late Miocene(Yilmaz et al., 2000; Okay, 2002).The Menderes Massif is usually inter-preted as a core complex delineated bylow-angle detachment faults (Bozkurtand Park, 1994; Hetzel et al., 1995;Ring et al., 2003). An alternativeexplanation associates …

geographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryOlivineSubductionGeochemistryGeologyMassifengineering.materialLate MioceneMantle (geology)Volcanic rockLithosphereengineeringXenolithGeologyTerra Nova
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The olivine macrocryst problem: New insights from minor and trace element compositions of olivine from Lac de Gras kimberlites, Canada

2015

This study presents detailed petrographical and geochemical investigations on remarkably fresh olivines in kimberlites from the EKATI Diamond Mine™ located in the Tertiary/Cretaceous Lac de Gras kimberlite field within the Slave craton of Canada. Olivine, constituting about 42 vol.% of the analyzed samples, can be divided into two textural groups: (i) macrocrystic olivines, > 100 μm sub-rounded crystals and (ii) groundmass olivines, < 100 μm subhedral crystals. Olivines from both populations define two distinct chemical trends; a “mantle trend” with angular cores, showing low Ca (< 0.1 wt.% CaO) and high Ni (0.3–0.4 wt.% NiO) at varying Mg# (0.86–0.93), contrasts with a “melt trend” typifie…

geographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryOlivineTrace elementGeochemistryMineralogyGeologyengineering.materialMantle (geology)law.inventionCratonGeochemistry and PetrologyLithospherelawengineeringChromiteCrystallizationKimberliteGeology
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Os isotopes and highly siderophile elements (HSE) in the Ligurian Ophiolites, Italy.

2000

The Os isotopic and highly siderophile element (HSE) concentration systematics of the upper mantle have been the focus of much recent interest. However, little systematic study has addressed the combined HSE and Os isotopes in mantle rocks from MOR ophiolites. The Ligurian ophiolites in northern Italy represent an important class of ophiolites representing, like Zabargad or the Galicia margin, crust with clear ocean ridge affinity floored by older mantle with arguably more continental affinities [Rampone et al., J. Petrol. 36, 18–105, 1995; Rampone et al., Contrib. Mineral. Petrol. 123, 61–67, 1996]. We have studied a suite of 15 geochemically and geologically well characterized mantle peri…

geographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryProterozoicGeochemistryMid-ocean ridgeCrustMassifOphioliteMantle (geology)GeophysicsSpace and Planetary ScienceGeochemistry and PetrologyUltramafic rockTransition zoneEarth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous)Geology
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Craton reactivation on the Labrador Sea margins: 40Ar/39Ar age and Sr–Nd–Hf–Pb isotope constraints from alkaline and carbonatite intrusives

2007

Abstract The once-contiguous North Atlantic craton (NAC) is crosscut by the Labrador Sea that opened during the Early Cenozoic after extensive Mesozoic continental rifting and removal of cratonic mantle. This large-scale structural change within the cratonic lithosphere was followed at about 150 Ma by the cessation of ultrapotassic and potassic-to-carbonatitic magma production, which had prevailed throughout much of the NAC history. At Aillik Bay, a sequence of olivine lamproites (1374.2 ± 4.2 Ma, 2σ), aillikites/carbonatites (590–555 Ma), and nephelinites (141.6 ± 1.0 Ma, 2σ) erupted through the southern NAC edge on the present-day Labrador Sea margin. Links between these alkaline magma ty…

geographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryRadiogenic nuclideOlivineGeochemistryPartial melting550 - Earth sciencesengineering.materialMantle (geology)CratonGeophysicsSpace and Planetary ScienceGeochemistry and PetrologyLithosphereAsthenosphereEarth and Planetary Sciences (miscellaneous)engineeringMetasomatismGeologyEarth and Planetary Science Letters
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Melt infiltration of the lower lithosphere beneath the Tanzania craton and the Albertine rift inferred from S receiver functions

2012

[1] The transition between the lithosphere and the asthenosphere is subject to numerous contemporary studies as its nature is still poorly understood. The thickest lithosphere is associated with old cratons and platforms and it has been shown that seismic investigations may fail to image the lithosphere-asthenosphere boundary in these areas. Instead, several recent studies have proposed a mid-lithospheric discontinuity of unknown origin existing under several cratons. In this study we investigate the Tanzania craton in East Africa which is enclosed by the eastern and western branches of the East African Rift System. We present evidence from S receiver functions for two consecutive discontin…

geographygeography.geographical_feature_categoryRiftGeochemistryMantle (geology)CratonGeophysicsDiscontinuity (geotechnical engineering)Geochemistry and PetrologyLithosphereAsthenosphereEast African RiftXenolithPetrologyGeologyGeochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems
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Lithospheric P- and S-wave velocity models of the Sicilian area using WAM tomography: Procedure and assessments

2013

We present 3-D models of the P- and S-wave velocity distributions in the crust and uppermost mantle beneath Sicily, Calabria (Southern Italy), and surrounding submerged areas, obtained by tomographic inversion of traveltimes of regional body waves phases. Our method combines double-difference tomographic inversion with a post-processing procedure [Weighted Average Model method (WAM)]. This procedure was applied to a set of models consistent with the experimental data. We tested the ability of the WAM procedure to mitigate the uncertainty associated with the arbitrary nature of the many input parameters required for each inversion. The local reliability and resolution of the obtained models …

geographygeography.geographical_feature_categorySeismic tomographyInversion (geology)CrustSedimentary basinCrustal structureMantle (geology)TectonicsGeophysicsVolcanoGeochemistry and PetrologyLithosphereSeismic tomographyContinental margins: convergentSettore GEO/11 - Geofisica ApplicataTomographyGeologySeismology
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Tectono-Magmatic Evolution, Age and Emplacement of the Agardagh Tes-Chem Ophiolite in Tuva, Central Asia: Crustal Growth by Island arc Accretion

2004

Publisher Summary The Agardagh Tes–Chem ophiolite in Tuva, Central Asia, is part of the Central Asian Mobile Belt which formed during subduction–accretion processes lasting from the early Neoproterozoic to the late Palaeozoic. The Agardagh Tes–Chem ophiolite marks the northwestern border of the Tuva–Mongolian Massif (TMM), which comprises several intrusive and metamorphic complexes. These complexes consist of metatonalites, gneisses, migmatites, amphibolites, marbles, quartzites, low-grade metasedimentary rocks and minor ultramafic lenses, and radiometric ages range between 536 and 464 Ma. Field observations suggest that the southwestern part of the Tes–Chem unit represents the lower to int…

geographygeography.geographical_feature_categorySheeted dyke complexMantle wedgeUltramafic rockGeochemistryIsland arcMassifMigmatiteOphioliteGeologyGneiss
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