Magmatism and tectonic setting of proto-Japan during the Early Carboniferous: Constraints from the geochemical characteristics of mafic volcanic rocks in the Hida Gaien Belt, SW Japan

[Display omitted] •Early Carboniferous subduction-related basalts–andesites are found in SW Japan.•High-Al basalts were generated by arc tholeiitic magma near crust–mantle boundary.•Basaltic andesites were generated by fractional crystallization of the high-Al magma.•Early Carboniferous tectonic set...

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Published inJournal of Asian earth sciences Vol. 236; p. 105312
Main Authors Shimura, Yusuke, Tsukada, Kazuhiro, Yamamoto, Koshi, Nadmid, Bayart
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Elsevier Ltd 15.09.2022
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Summary:[Display omitted] •Early Carboniferous subduction-related basalts–andesites are found in SW Japan.•High-Al basalts were generated by arc tholeiitic magma near crust–mantle boundary.•Basaltic andesites were generated by fractional crystallization of the high-Al magma.•Early Carboniferous tectonic setting of proto-Japan was a primitive island arc. The Hida Gaien Belt in southwest Japan consists mainly of Paleozoic to Mesozoic shelf-facies rocks and records the tectonic evolution of East Asia. Here we report a study of the geochemistry of mafic volcanic rocks from the Early Carboniferous Arakigawa Formation of this belt. Two types of mafic volcanic rock are identified: (1) high-Al basaltic lavas, which were generated by island arc tholeiitic magma that formed under high-pressure conditions near the crust–mantle boundary and in which the nucleation of plagioclase was suppressed and delayed; and (2) basaltic andesitic lavas, which were generated by fractional crystallization of the high-Al tholeiitic magma. Combining our new results with previous geological findings, we consider that the tectonic setting of proto-Japan during the Early Carboniferous was a primitive island arc characterized by active island arc tholeiitic magmatism and the absence of a granitic batholith.
ISSN:1367-9120
1878-5786
DOI:10.1016/j.jseaes.2022.105312