New Zealand Journal of Geology and Geophysics abstracts
The Fontaine Pluton: an early Ross Orogeny calc-alkaline gabbro from southern Victoria Land, Antarctica
John M. Cottle*
Alan F. Cooper†
Geology Department
University of Otago
P.O. Box 56
Dunedin, New Zealand
alan.cooper@stonebow.otago.ac.nz
*Present address: Department of Earth Sciences, University of Oxford, Parks Road, Oxford, OX1 3PR, United Kingdom.
†Author for correspondence.
Abstract The Fontaine Pluton is a previously
undescribed mafic intrusion outcropping at Fontaine Bluff on the south
side of the Carlyon Glacier in southern Victoria Land, Antarctica. It
is the southern-most member of a laterally extensive mafic suite
emplaced at mid-crustal depths during the initial stages of the Ross
Orogeny. The pluton comprises recrystallised hornblende-biotite gabbro,
which in places shows well-defined centimetre to metre scale primary
igneous layering. Recrystallised ultramafic enclaves composed of
amphibole-chlorite-talc are inferred to be remnants of a chemically and
mineralogically distinct cumulate fraction. The intrusion has a 87Sr/86Sr(i) ratio of 0.70679 and a 143Nd/144Nd(i) ratio of 0.51187 (εNd(i)
= –1.2). This, coupled with other geochemical data, implies that
the Fontaine Pluton was formed by c. 15% partial melting of a
depleted mantle source that was subsequently contaminated by
continental crust. Preliminary U-Pb geochronology on zircon suggests an
emplacement age for the pluton of 546 ± 10 Ma. These new
data indicate that Ross Orogeny magmatism in this area of southern
Victoria Land was initiated in the late Neoproterozoic along a
subducting plate margin.
Keywords Fontaine Pluton; Ross Orogeny; calc-alkaline; gabbro; Antarctica
G04039; Received 13 October 2004; accepted 19 January 2006; Online publication date 12 May 2006
New Zealand Journal of Geology & Geophysics, 2006, Vol. 49: 177–189
0028–8306/06/4902–0177 © The Royal Society of New Zealand 2006
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