Abstract Two sedimentary associations closely related to
temporally discrete ophiolitic magma suites occur within the Early Permian Dun
Mountain Ophiolite Belt (DMOB), New Zealand. These are: (1) a suite of diverse
chemical sediments and turbidite argillites (TA) that bear an intimate depositional
relationship to early-formed pillow lavas (back-arc basin basalts); and (2)
a younger, lithic-dominated, bimodal, coarse sandstone-ophiolitic rudite assemblage
of proximal turbidite/mass-flow origin, rich in clasts of infant-arc magmas
which comprise the bulk of the ophiolite. There are four groups of DMOB chemical
sediments. Red hematitic chert (group 1) fills interstices between basalt pillows,
and black nodular Fe-Mn deposits (group 2) occur along pillow lava/sediment
interfaces. These facies are overlain by red mudstones (group 3), and mottled
orange-olive brown mudstones (altered hyaloclastites; group 4). Geochemical
features (including REE contents, Fe/Ti and transition ratios) indicate that
the cherts reflect silica and metalliferous contributions to sea water, promoted
by low-temperature hydrothermal alteration of glassy basalt, while group 4 muds
represent residual components in halmyrolytically altered volcanic glass. Transition
metal and REE enrichments in group 2 nodules (with high Ce/Ce*, Ni/Fe, and Cu/Fe
ratios) reflect hydrogenous chemisorption to a hydothermal component (with high
Ba and Sr). The nodules possess εNd(T) values (c. 0)
identical to those calculated for Permian sea water. Group 3 red muds have lower
εNd(T) = -1 to -2, and Nd model ages (TNdDM)
that indicate contributions from continentally derived fluvial particulate fallout
of mean Proterozoic age. For the nodules and red muds, strong negative correlations
between Mn/Fe, Nd, Ce*/Ce, and εNd(T) are attributed
to increasing diagenetic influence in the muds. εNd(T)
values (c. +2) in group 4 muds are transitional toward higher values in their
(hyaloclastite) basalt glass precursors.
Metalliferous contributions to red and green TA in the overlying terrigenous
sedimentary sequence also link these facies to early DMOB back-arc eruptives.
The red and green TA pass upwards into ungraded Atomodesmid-bearing grey
TA, implying turbidite deposition in a shallowing marine environment. The (mainly
andesitic) TA show systematic trends of decreasing Eu/Eu* and εNd(T)
with increasing ΣREE, La/Y, Th/Sc, and SiO2. Th abundances and
Th/Sc ratios (up to 1.6) in the TA are akin to those of calc-alkaline magmas
in continental arcs, and are significantly greater than island-arc or ophiolitic
volcanics. A narrow range of positive εNd(T) values (+0.5
to +2.0) for the TA suggests a young differentiated continental arc source,
less dissected than the quartzofeldspathic plutonic provenance for the Torlesse
(εNd(T)<-2). The exclusively terrigenous, younger DMOB
sedimentary suite is compositionally bimodal, with coarse mafic sandstones rich
in clinopyroxenes identical to those in DMOB infant-arc magmas, and felsic,
matrix-supported breccias that contain abundant clasts of infant-arc rocks,
including silicic plagiogranites and rare ultramafics. Low Th/Sc ratios (<0.3),
and slight LREE enrichment (CeN/YbN = 2.5-2.8) in the sandstones resemble island-arc
tholeiites (IAT). The breccias have low Eu/Eu* (c. 0.72), CeN/YbN = 1.6, Th/Sc
(0.1-0.2), and TbN/YbN c. 1.0, features transitional between the sandstones
and DMOB plagiogranites. Importantly, the sandstones and breccias show high
positive initial Nd ratios (εNd(T) = +5 to +8) akin to
values for Brook Street IAT (εNd(T) = +9). This implies
juvenile (mantle-derived) source rocks for both the mafic and felsic younger
terrigenous sediments, compatible with crustal residence (mean provenance) ages
less than for the TA. Little continental input is permitted by Nd-isotopic data
for these rocks. Whereas the early DMOB pillow basalt - chemical sediment -
TA assemblage was emplaced in a back-arc setting, with influx of detritus in
part from an active continental margin (possibly within the New England Orogen),
the younger DMOB terrigenous sediment association shows a close kinship with
bimodal DMOB magmatism related to infant arc volcanic centres in an extensional
forearc regime. Turbidite sands and mass-flow deposits were shed into proximal
fault-bound basins isolated from continental clastic sources. The data are compatible
with a recently reassessed model for the tectonomagmatic evolution of the DMOB,
involving initial back-arc seafloor generation, and later voluminous extensional
magmatism during nascent subduction, probably related to initiation of the Brook
Street arc.
Keywords ophiolite; Nd-isotope; geochemistry; chemical sediment; hydrothermal; hydrogenous; diagenesis; turbidite-argillite; provenance; Dun Mountain Ophiolite
G01030 Received 17 September 2001; accepted 6 August 2002; published 6 December 2002
New Zealand Journal of Geology & Geophysics, 2002, Vol. 45: 427-451
0028-8306/02/4504-0427 $7.00/0 © The Royal Society of New Zealand 2002
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