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Late ordovician mafic magmatic event, southeast Siberia : Tectonic implications, lip interpretation, and potential link with a mass extinction. / Khudoley, Andrey K.; Prokopiev, Andrei V.; Chamberlain, Kevin R.; Savelev, Aleksandr D.; Ernst, Richard E.; Malyshev, Sergey V.; Moskalenko, Artem N.; Lebedeva, Olga Yu.

в: Minerals, Том 10, № 12, 1108, 12.2020, стр. 1-23.

Результаты исследований: Научные публикации в периодических изданияхстатьяРецензирование

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Author

Khudoley, Andrey K. ; Prokopiev, Andrei V. ; Chamberlain, Kevin R. ; Savelev, Aleksandr D. ; Ernst, Richard E. ; Malyshev, Sergey V. ; Moskalenko, Artem N. ; Lebedeva, Olga Yu. / Late ordovician mafic magmatic event, southeast Siberia : Tectonic implications, lip interpretation, and potential link with a mass extinction. в: Minerals. 2020 ; Том 10, № 12. стр. 1-23.

BibTeX

@article{bee27ac763244c27aced24e578226ba8,
title = "Late ordovician mafic magmatic event, southeast Siberia: Tectonic implications, lip interpretation, and potential link with a mass extinction",
abstract = "A geochronological, isotopic, and geochemical study of the Suordakh event of mafic magmatic intrusions on the southeast Siberian margin was undertaken. U-Pb baddeleyite dating of a mafic sill intruding lower Cambrian rocks, yielded a 458 ± 13 Ma emplacement age. The chemical composition and stratigraphic setting of this dated sill differed from that previously attributed to the Suordakh event, implying that additional intrusions, previously mapped as Devonian, potentially belonged to the Suordakh event. No correlation between L.O.I. and concentration of highly mobile major and trace elements was documented, showing small or no influence of hydrothermal alteration on the chemical composition of the intrusions. A new tectonic reconstruction located an island arc and active margin relatively close to the study area. However, all samples had chemical compositions close to that of OIB and did not display Ta-Nb and Ti-negative anomalies, nor other features typical for subduction-related magmatism. The major and trace element distribution was most characteristic of within-plate basalts with the mantle source composition being transitional from spinel to garnet lherzolite. Combining four U-Pb baddeleyite dates of mafic sills and dykes from southeast Siberia, the age of the Suordakh event was estimated at 454 ± 10 Ma. The area of the Suordakh event was at least 35,000–40,000 km2 (an estimate including sills previously interpreted as Devonian), and could be increased with additional dating in Southeastern Siberia. Similar ages for within-plate intrusions were reported from South Korea, West Mongolia, South Argentina, North Iran and Northwest Canada, and these ca. 450 Ma ages were collectively close in timing with the latest Ordovician (Hirnantian) mass extinction. More high-precision dating is necessary to fully test a link between the Suordakh event (and the other age-correlative events) and the end-Ordovician mass extinction.",
keywords = "Geochemistry, Late Ordovician mass extinction, LIP, Nd and Sr isotopic composition, Suordakh event, U–Pb baddeleyite dating",
author = "Khudoley, {Andrey K.} and Prokopiev, {Andrei V.} and Chamberlain, {Kevin R.} and Savelev, {Aleksandr D.} and Ernst, {Richard E.} and Malyshev, {Sergey V.} and Moskalenko, {Artem N.} and Lebedeva, {Olga Yu}",
note = "Funding Information: This research was funded by the Russian Science Foundation, grant number 18-17-00240. Publisher Copyright: {\textcopyright} 2020 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. Copyright: Copyright 2020 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.",
year = "2020",
month = dec,
doi = "10.3390/min10121108",
language = "English",
volume = "10",
pages = "1--23",
journal = "Minerals",
issn = "2075-163X",
publisher = "MDPI AG",
number = "12",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Late ordovician mafic magmatic event, southeast Siberia

T2 - Tectonic implications, lip interpretation, and potential link with a mass extinction

AU - Khudoley, Andrey K.

AU - Prokopiev, Andrei V.

AU - Chamberlain, Kevin R.

AU - Savelev, Aleksandr D.

AU - Ernst, Richard E.

AU - Malyshev, Sergey V.

AU - Moskalenko, Artem N.

AU - Lebedeva, Olga Yu

N1 - Funding Information: This research was funded by the Russian Science Foundation, grant number 18-17-00240. Publisher Copyright: © 2020 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. Copyright: Copyright 2020 Elsevier B.V., All rights reserved.

PY - 2020/12

Y1 - 2020/12

N2 - A geochronological, isotopic, and geochemical study of the Suordakh event of mafic magmatic intrusions on the southeast Siberian margin was undertaken. U-Pb baddeleyite dating of a mafic sill intruding lower Cambrian rocks, yielded a 458 ± 13 Ma emplacement age. The chemical composition and stratigraphic setting of this dated sill differed from that previously attributed to the Suordakh event, implying that additional intrusions, previously mapped as Devonian, potentially belonged to the Suordakh event. No correlation between L.O.I. and concentration of highly mobile major and trace elements was documented, showing small or no influence of hydrothermal alteration on the chemical composition of the intrusions. A new tectonic reconstruction located an island arc and active margin relatively close to the study area. However, all samples had chemical compositions close to that of OIB and did not display Ta-Nb and Ti-negative anomalies, nor other features typical for subduction-related magmatism. The major and trace element distribution was most characteristic of within-plate basalts with the mantle source composition being transitional from spinel to garnet lherzolite. Combining four U-Pb baddeleyite dates of mafic sills and dykes from southeast Siberia, the age of the Suordakh event was estimated at 454 ± 10 Ma. The area of the Suordakh event was at least 35,000–40,000 km2 (an estimate including sills previously interpreted as Devonian), and could be increased with additional dating in Southeastern Siberia. Similar ages for within-plate intrusions were reported from South Korea, West Mongolia, South Argentina, North Iran and Northwest Canada, and these ca. 450 Ma ages were collectively close in timing with the latest Ordovician (Hirnantian) mass extinction. More high-precision dating is necessary to fully test a link between the Suordakh event (and the other age-correlative events) and the end-Ordovician mass extinction.

AB - A geochronological, isotopic, and geochemical study of the Suordakh event of mafic magmatic intrusions on the southeast Siberian margin was undertaken. U-Pb baddeleyite dating of a mafic sill intruding lower Cambrian rocks, yielded a 458 ± 13 Ma emplacement age. The chemical composition and stratigraphic setting of this dated sill differed from that previously attributed to the Suordakh event, implying that additional intrusions, previously mapped as Devonian, potentially belonged to the Suordakh event. No correlation between L.O.I. and concentration of highly mobile major and trace elements was documented, showing small or no influence of hydrothermal alteration on the chemical composition of the intrusions. A new tectonic reconstruction located an island arc and active margin relatively close to the study area. However, all samples had chemical compositions close to that of OIB and did not display Ta-Nb and Ti-negative anomalies, nor other features typical for subduction-related magmatism. The major and trace element distribution was most characteristic of within-plate basalts with the mantle source composition being transitional from spinel to garnet lherzolite. Combining four U-Pb baddeleyite dates of mafic sills and dykes from southeast Siberia, the age of the Suordakh event was estimated at 454 ± 10 Ma. The area of the Suordakh event was at least 35,000–40,000 km2 (an estimate including sills previously interpreted as Devonian), and could be increased with additional dating in Southeastern Siberia. Similar ages for within-plate intrusions were reported from South Korea, West Mongolia, South Argentina, North Iran and Northwest Canada, and these ca. 450 Ma ages were collectively close in timing with the latest Ordovician (Hirnantian) mass extinction. More high-precision dating is necessary to fully test a link between the Suordakh event (and the other age-correlative events) and the end-Ordovician mass extinction.

KW - Geochemistry

KW - Late Ordovician mass extinction

KW - LIP

KW - Nd and Sr isotopic composition

KW - Suordakh event

KW - U–Pb baddeleyite dating

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85097673661&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.3390/min10121108

DO - 10.3390/min10121108

M3 - Article

AN - SCOPUS:85097673661

VL - 10

SP - 1

EP - 23

JO - Minerals

JF - Minerals

SN - 2075-163X

IS - 12

M1 - 1108

ER -

ID: 74542158