Title of article :
Geology and geochronology of the Spirit Mountain batholith, southern Nevada: Implications for timescales and physical processes of batholith construction
Author/Authors :
Walker Jr.، نويسنده , , B.A. and Miller، نويسنده , , C.F. and Lowery Claiborne، نويسنده , , L. and Wooden، نويسنده , , J.L and Miller، نويسنده , , J.S.، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Pages :
24
From page :
239
To page :
262
Abstract :
The Spirit Mountain batholith (SMB) is a ∼ 250 km2 composite silicic intrusion located within the Colorado River Extensional Corridor in southernmost Nevada. Westward tilting of 40–50° has exposed a cross-section from the roof through deep levels of the batholith. Piecemeal construction is indicated by zircon geochronology, field relations, and elemental geochemistry. Zircon U/Pb data (SHRIMP) demonstrates a ∼ 2 million year (17.4–15.3 Ma) history for the SMB. Individual samples contain zircons with ages that span the lifetime of the batholith, suggesting recycling of extant zircon into new magma pulses. Field relations reveal several distinct intrusive episodes and suggest a common injection geometry of stacked horizontal sheets. rgest unit of the SMB is a gradational section (from roof downward) of high-silica leucogranite through coarse granite into foliated quartz monzonite. Solidification of this unit spans most of the history of the batholith. The 25 km × 2 km leucogranite was emplaced incrementally as subhorizontal sheets over most or all of the history of this section, suggesting repeated fractional crystallization and melt segregation events. The quartz monzonite and coarse granite are interpreted to be cumulate residuum of this fractionation. Age data from throughout this gradational unit show multiple zircon populations within individual samples. Subsequent distinct intrusions that cut this large unit, which include minor populations of zircons that record the ages of earlier events in construction of the batholith, preserve a sheeted, sill-on-sill geometry. ision the SMB to have been a patchwork of melt-rich, melt-poor, and entirely solid zones throughout its active life. Preservation of intrusion geometries and contacts depended on the consistency of the host rock. Zircons recycled into new pulses of magma document remobilization of previously emplaced crystal mush, suggesting the mechanisms by which evidence for initial construction of the batholith became blurred.
Keywords :
Colorado River Extensional Corridor , batholith construction , magma chamber , granite , zircon geochronology
Journal title :
Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research
Serial Year :
2007
Journal title :
Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research
Record number :
2245326
Link To Document :
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