TY - GEN A1 - Terbishalieva, Baiansuluu A1 - Timmerman, Martin Jan A1 - Mikolaichuk, Alexander A1 - Altenberger, Uwe A1 - Slama, Jiri A1 - Schleicher, Anja Maria A1 - Sudo, Masafumi A1 - Sobel, Edward A1 - Cichy, Sarah Bettina T1 - Calc-alkaline volcanic rocks and zircon ages of the late Tonian BT - Early Cryogenian arc-related Big Naryn Complex in the Eastern Djetim-Too Range, Middle Tianshan block, Kyrgyzstan T2 - Zweitveröffentlichungen der Universität Potsdam : Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe N2 - The Big Naryn Complex (BNC) in the East Djetim-Too Range of the Kyrgyz Middle Tianshan block is a tectonized, at least 2 km thick sequence of predominantly felsic to intermediate volcanic rocks intruded by porphyric rhyolite sills. It overlies a basement of metamorphic rocks and is overlain by late Neoproterozoic Djetim-Too Formation sediments; these also occur as tectonic intercalations in the BNC. The up to ca. 1100 m thick Lower Member is composed of predominantly rhyolites-to-dacites and minor basalts, while the at least 900 m thick pyroclastic Upper Member is dominated by rhyolitic-to-dacitic ignimbrites. Porphyric rhyolite sills are concentrated at the top of the Lower Member. A Lower Member rhyolite and a sill sample have LA-ICP-MS U-Pb zircon crystallization ages of 726.1 +/- 2.2 Ma and 720.3 +/- 6.5 Ma, respectively, showing that most of the magmatism occurred within a short time span in the late Tonian-early Cryogenian. Inherited zircons in the sill sample have Neoarchean (2.63, 2.64 Ga), Paleo- (2.33-1.81 Ga), Meso- (1.55 Ga), and Neoproterozoic (ca. 815 Ma) ages, and were derived from a heterogeneous Kuilyu Complex basement. A 1751 +/- 7 Ma Ar-40/Ar-39 age for amphibole from metagabbro is the age of cooling subsequent to Paleoproterozoic metamorphism of the Kuilyu Complex. The large amount of pyroclastic rocks, and their major and trace element compositions, the presence of Neoarchean to Neoproterozoic inherited zircons and a depositional basement of metamorphic rocks point to formation of the BNC in a continental magmatic arc setting. T3 - Zweitveröffentlichungen der Universität Potsdam : Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe - 1361 KW - Tianshan orogenic belt KW - Big Naryn complex KW - Tonian–Cryogenian KW - magmatic arc KW - calc-alkaline KW - Kuilyu complex Y1 - 2021 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-569585 SN - 1437-3254 SN - 1437-3262 SN - 1866-8372 IS - 1 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Franz, Gerhard A1 - Sudo, Masafumi A1 - Khomenko, Vladimir T1 - 40Ar/39Ar dating of a hydrothermal pegmatitic buddingtonite–muscovite assemblage from Volyn, Ukraine JF - European journal of mineralogy : EJM : an international journal on mineralogy, petrology, geochemistry, and related sciences N2 - We determined Ar-40/Ar-39 ages of buddingtonite, occurring together with muscovite, with the laser-ablation method. This is the first attempt to date the NH4-feldspar buddingtonite, which is typical for sedimentary-diagenetic environments of sediments, rich in organic matter, or in hydrothermal environments, associated with volcanic geyser systems. The sample is a hydrothermal breccia, coming from the Paleoproterozoic pegmatite field of the Korosten Plutonic Complex, Volyn, Ukraine. A detailed characterization by optical methods, electron microprobe analyses, backscattered electron imaging, and IR analyses showed that the buddingtonite consists of euhedral-appearing platy crystals of tens of micrometers wide, 100 or more micrometers in length, which consist of fine-grained fibers of <= 1 mu m thickness. The crystals are sector and growth zoned in terms of K-NH4-H3O content. The content of K allows for an age determination with the Ar-40/Ar-39 method, as well as in the accompanying muscovite, intimately intergrown with the buddingtonite. The determinations on muscovite yielded an age of 1491 +/- 9 Ma, interpreted as the hydrothermal event forming the breccia. However, buddingtonite apparent ages yielded a range of 563 +/- 14 Ma down to 383 +/- 12 Ma, which are interpreted as reset ages due to Ar loss of the fibrous buddingtonite crystals during later heating. We conclude that buddingtonite is suited for Ar-40/Ar-39 age determinations as a supplementary method, together with other methods and minerals; however, it requires a detailed mineralogical characterization, and the ages will likely represent minimum ages. Y1 - 2022 U6 - https://doi.org/10.5194/ejm-34-7-2022 SN - 0935-1221 SN - 1617-4011 VL - 34 IS - 1 SP - 7 EP - 18 PB - Copernicus CY - Göttingen ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Ghignone, Stefano A1 - Sudo, Masafumi A1 - Balestro, Gianni A1 - Borghi, Alessandro A1 - Gattiglio, Marco A1 - Ferrero, Silvio A1 - Schijndel, Valby van T1 - Timing of exhumation of meta-ophiolite units in the Western Alps BT - New tectonic implications from Ar-40/Ar-39 white mica ages from Piedmont Zone (Susa Valley) JF - Lithos : an international journal of mineralogy, petrology, and geochemistry N2 - A multidisciplinary approach to the study of collisional orogenic belts can improve our knowledge of their geodynamic evolution and may suggest new tectonic models, especially for (U)HP rocks inside the accretionary wedge. In the Western Alps, wherein nappes of different origin are stacked, having recorded different metamorphic peaks at different stages of the orogenic evolution. This study focuses on the External (EPZ) and Internal (IPZ) ophiolitic units of the Piedmont Zone (Susa Valley, Western Alps), which were deformed throughout four tectonometamorphic phases (D1 to D4), developing different foliations and cleavages (S1 to S4) at different metamorphic conditions. The IPZ and EPZ are separated by a shear zone (i.e. the Susa Shear Zone (SSZ)) during which a related mylonitic foliation (SM) developed. S1 developed at high pressure conditions (Epidote-eclogite vs. Lawsonite-blueschist facies conditions for IPZ and EPZ, respectively), as suggested by the composition of white mica (i.e. phengite), whereas S2 developed at low pressure conditions (Epidote-greenschist facies conditions in both IPZ and EPZ) and is defined by muscovite. White mica defining the SM mylonitic foliation (T1) is mostly defined by phengite, while the T2-related disjunctive cleavage is defined by fine-grained muscovite. The relative chronology inferred from meso-and micro-structural observations suggests that T1 was near-coeval with respect to the D2, while T2 developed during D4. A new set of radiometric ages of the main metamorphic foliations were obtained by in situ Ar/Ar dating on white mica. Different generations of white mica defining S1 and S2 foliations in both the IPZ and EPZ and SM in the SSZ, were dated and two main groups of ages were obtained. In both IPZ and EPZ, S1 foliation developed at-46-41 Ma, while S2 foliation developed at-40-36 Ma and was nearly coeval with the SM mylonitic foliation (-39-36 Ma). Comparison between structural, petrological and geochronological data allows to define time of coupling of the different units and consequently to infer new tectonic implications for the exhumation of meta-ophiolites of the Piedmont Zone within axial sector of the Western Alps. KW - Exhumation KW - meta-ophiolites KW - Piedmont Zone KW - Western Alps KW - Ar-40 KW - Ar-39 Y1 - 2021 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.lithos.2021.106443 SN - 0024-4937 SN - 1872-6143 VL - 404-405 PB - Elsevier CY - Amsterdam ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Riedl, Simon A1 - Melnick, Daniel A1 - Njue, Lucy A1 - Sudo, Masafumi A1 - Strecker, Manfred T1 - Mid-Pleistocene to recent crustal extension in the inner graben of the Northern Kenya Rift JF - Geochemistry, geophysics, geosystems N2 - Magmatic continental rifts often constitute nascent plate boundaries, yet long-term extension rates and transient rate changes associated with these early stages of continental breakup remain difficult to determine. Here, we derive a time-averaged minimum extension rate for the inner graben of the Northern Kenya Rift (NKR) of the East African Rift System for the last 0.5 m.y. We use the TanDEM-X science digital elevation model to evaluate fault-scarp geometries and determine fault throws across the volcano-tectonic axis of the inner graben of the NKR. Along rift-perpendicular profiles, amounts of cumulative extension are determined, and by integrating four new Ar-40/Ar-39 radiometric dates for the Silali volcano into the existing geochronology of the faulted volcanic units, time-averaged extension rates are calculated. This study reveals that in the inner graben of the NKR, the long-term extension rate based on mid-Pleistocene to recent brittle deformation has minimum values of 1.0-1.6 mm yr(-1), locally with values up to 2.0 mm yr(-1). A comparison with the decadal, geodetically determined extension rate reveals that at least 65% of the extension must be accommodated within a narrow, 20-km-wide zone of the inner rift. In light of virtually inactive border faults of the NKR, we show that extension is focused in the region of the active volcano-tectonic axis in the inner graben, thus highlighting the maturing of continental rifting in the NKR. KW - extensional tectonics KW - Kenya Rift KW - TanDEM-X DEM KW - DEM analysis KW - geochronology KW - normal faults Y1 - 2022 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1029/2021GC010123 SN - 1525-2027 VL - 23 IS - 3 PB - American Geophysical Union CY - Washington ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Zozulya, Dmitry R. A1 - Kullerud, Kare A1 - Ribacki, Enrico A1 - Altenberger, Uwe A1 - Sudo, Masafumi A1 - Savchenko, Yevgeny E. T1 - The newly discovered neoproterozoic aillikite occurrence in Vinoren (Southern Norway) BT - age, geodynamic position and mineralogical evidence of diamond-bearing mantle source JF - Minerals N2 - During the period 750-600 Ma ago, prior to the final break-up of the supercontinent Rodinia, the crust of both the North American Craton and Baltica was intruded by significant amounts of rift-related magmas originating from the mantle. In the Proterozoic crust of Southern Norway, the 580 Ma old Fen carbonatite-ultramafic complex is a representative of this type of rocks. In this paper, we report the occurrence of an ultramafic lamprophyre dyke which possibly is linked to the Fen complex, although Ar-40/Ar-39 data from phenocrystic phlogopite from the dyke gave an age of 686 +/- 9 Ma. The lamprophyre dyke was recently discovered in one of the Kongsberg silver mines at Vinoren, Norway. Whole rock geochemistry, geochronological and mineralogical data from the ultramafic lamprophyre dyke are presented aiming to elucidate its origin and possible geodynamic setting. From the whole-rock composition of the Vinoren dyke, the rock could be recognized as transitional between carbonatite and kimberlite-II (orangeite). From its diagnostic mineralogy, the rock is classified as aillikite. The compositions and xenocrystic nature of several of the major and accessory minerals from the Vinoren aillikite are characteristic for diamondiferous rocks (kimberlites/lamproites/UML): Phlogopite with kinoshitalite-rich rims, chromite-spinel-ulvospinel series, Mg- and Mn-rich ilmenites, rutile and lucasite-(Ce). We suggest that the aillikite melt formed during partial melting of a MARID (mica-amphibole-rutile-ilmenite-diopside)-like source under CO2 fluxing. The pre-rifting geodynamic setting of the Vinoren aillikite before the Rodinia supercontinent breakup suggests a relatively thick SCLM (Subcontinental Lithospheric Mantle) during this stage and might indicate a diamond-bearing source for the parental melt. This is in contrast to the about 100 Ma younger Fen complex, which were derived from a thin SCLM. KW - aillikite KW - phlogopite KW - carbonate KW - spinel KW - ilmenite KW - titanite KW - diamond KW - Vinoren KW - Southern Norway Y1 - 2020 U6 - https://doi.org/10.3390/min10111029 SN - 2075-163X VL - 10 IS - 11 PB - MDPI CY - Basel ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Krmíček, Lukáš A1 - Timmerman, Martin Jan A1 - Ziemann, Martin Andreas A1 - Sudo, Masafumi A1 - Ulrych, Jaromir T1 - 40Ar/39Ar step-heating dating of phlogopite and kaersutite megacrysts from the Železná hůrka (Eisenbühl) Pleistocene scoria cone, Czech Republic JF - Geologica Carpathica N2 - (40)A/Ar-39 step-heating of mica and amphibole megacrysts from hauyne-bearing olivine melilitite scoria/tephra from the Zelezna hurka yielded a 435 +/- 108 ka isotope correlation age for phlogopite and a more imprecise 1.55 Ma total gas age of the kaersutite megacryst. The amphibole megacrysts may constitute the first, and the younger phlogopite megacrysts the later phase of mafic, hydrous melilitic magma crystallization. It cannot be ruled out that the amphibole megacrysts are petrogenetically unrelated to tephra and phlogopite megacrysts and were derived from mantle xenoliths or disaggregated older, deep crustal pegmatites. This is in line both with the rarity of amphibole at Zelezna hurka and with the observed signs of magmatic resorption at the edges of amphibole crystals. KW - Bohemian Massif KW - Zelezna hurka KW - Eisenbuhl KW - argon dating KW - mica KW - amphibole KW - melilitite Y1 - 2020 U6 - https://doi.org/10.31577/GeolCarp.71.4.6 SN - 1335-0552 SN - 1336-8052 VL - 71 IS - 4 SP - 382 EP - 387 PB - Veda CY - Bratislava ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Scharf, Andreas A1 - Sudo, Masafumi A1 - Pracejus, Bernhard A1 - Mattern, Frank A1 - Callegari, Ivan A1 - Bauer, Wilfried A1 - Scharf, Katharina T1 - Late Lutetian (Eocene) mafic intrusion into shallow marine platform deposits north of the Oman Mountains (Rusayl Embayment) and its tectonic significance JF - Journal of African earth sciences N2 - A silica undersaturated alkali-olivine basanitic magma intruded the late Paleocene/early Eocene Jafnayn Formation near Muscat. Geochemical analyses indicate that a significant amount of host rock (limestone) was assimilated into the magma. We dated the basanite as 42.7 +/- 1.0 Ma (2 sigma error; late Lutetian), using the whole rock Ar-40/Ar-39 step-wise heating technique. Intrusion occurred in the hanging wall of a major regional extensional shear zone (Frontal Range Fault, FRF) bounding the northern margin of two domes within the Oman Mountains (Jabal Akhdar and Saih Hatat domes). Two shear intervals along the FRF have been documented. The first interval lasted immediately after emplacement of the Semail Ophiolite (latest Cretaceous-early Eocene) while the second and poorly constrained interval was assumed to have occurred during the Oligocene. The proximity of the basanite to the FRF suggests that magma used extensional faults for the upper part of its ascent path. Reactivated Permian rift faults of the Pangaea rift or other preexisting faults may have been used for the lower ascent part. We conclude that the basanite intrusion coincided with the onset of the second deformation interval along the FRF, because (1) the position of the basanite is near a dextral releasing bend, associated with the second shear interval, (2) the overlap of our Ar-40/Ar-39 age with the cooling curves for rocks from the nearby Jabal Akhdar Dome, and (3) the basanite postdates the first FRF deformation episode by > 10 Ma. Thus, the second interval along the FRF had started already during the late Lutetian and probably lasted into the Miocene. KW - Ar-40/Ar-39 age KW - Jafnayn formation KW - gravitational collapse KW - Basanite KW - extension KW - Limestone assimilation in basanite Y1 - 2020 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jafrearsci.2020.103941 SN - 1464-343X SN - 1879-1956 VL - 170 PB - Elsevier CY - Oxford ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Terbishalieva, Baiansuluu A1 - Timmerman, Martin Jan A1 - Mikolaichuk, Alexander A1 - Altenberger, Uwe A1 - Slama, Jiri A1 - Schleicher, Anja Maria A1 - Sudo, Masafumi A1 - Sobel, Edward A1 - Cichy, Sarah Bettina T1 - Calc-alkaline volcanic rocks and zircon ages of the late Tonian BT - Early Cryogenian arc-related Big Naryn Complex in the Eastern Djetim-Too Range, Middle Tianshan block, Kyrgyzstan JF - International journal of earth sciences N2 - The Big Naryn Complex (BNC) in the East Djetim-Too Range of the Kyrgyz Middle Tianshan block is a tectonized, at least 2 km thick sequence of predominantly felsic to intermediate volcanic rocks intruded by porphyric rhyolite sills. It overlies a basement of metamorphic rocks and is overlain by late Neoproterozoic Djetim-Too Formation sediments; these also occur as tectonic intercalations in the BNC. The up to ca. 1100 m thick Lower Member is composed of predominantly rhyolites-to-dacites and minor basalts, while the at least 900 m thick pyroclastic Upper Member is dominated by rhyolitic-to-dacitic ignimbrites. Porphyric rhyolite sills are concentrated at the top of the Lower Member. A Lower Member rhyolite and a sill sample have LA-ICP-MS U-Pb zircon crystallization ages of 726.1 +/- 2.2 Ma and 720.3 +/- 6.5 Ma, respectively, showing that most of the magmatism occurred within a short time span in the late Tonian-early Cryogenian. Inherited zircons in the sill sample have Neoarchean (2.63, 2.64 Ga), Paleo- (2.33-1.81 Ga), Meso- (1.55 Ga), and Neoproterozoic (ca. 815 Ma) ages, and were derived from a heterogeneous Kuilyu Complex basement. A 1751 +/- 7 Ma Ar-40/Ar-39 age for amphibole from metagabbro is the age of cooling subsequent to Paleoproterozoic metamorphism of the Kuilyu Complex. The large amount of pyroclastic rocks, and their major and trace element compositions, the presence of Neoarchean to Neoproterozoic inherited zircons and a depositional basement of metamorphic rocks point to formation of the BNC in a continental magmatic arc setting. KW - Tianshan orogenic belt KW - Big Naryn complex KW - Tonian–Cryogenian KW - magmatic arc KW - calc-alkaline KW - Kuilyu complex Y1 - 2021 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1007/s00531-020-01956-z SN - 1437-3254 SN - 1437-3262 VL - 110 IS - 1 SP - 353 EP - 375 PB - Springer CY - New York ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Owen-Smith, T. M. A1 - Ashwal, L. D. A1 - Sudo, Masafumi A1 - Trumbull, Robert B. T1 - Age and Petrogenesis of the Doros Complex, Namibia, and Implications for Early Plume-derived Melts in the Parana-Etendeka LIP JF - Journal of petrology N2 - The early Cretaceous Paraná–Etendeka Large Igneous Province is attributed to the impact of the Tristan mantle plume on the base of the continental lithosphere and the associated opening of the South Atlantic Ocean during the breakup of West Gondwana. Although the geochemistry of the Paraná and Etendeka volcanic rocks has been extensively studied, there is still disagreement on the role of the mantle plume in the production of the magma types observed, because some of their primary compositions are obscured by continental crustal contamination. However, there are related plutonic rocks that preserve mantle signatures. The Doros Complex is a shallow-level mafic intrusion within the Etendeka Province of Namibia. New 39Ar/40Ar step-heating ages for Doros gabbros from this study (weighted mean of 130 ± 1 Ma; 2σ error) confirm contemporaneity with the Paraná–Etendeka magmatic event. The Doros suite yields mean ɛNd values of +5·3 ± 1·0 (1σ; n = 11), initial 87Sr/86Sr = 0·70418 ± 0·00017 (n = 11) and 206Pb/204Pb = 18·11 ± 0·06 (n = 13) at 132 Ma. The clustering of isotopic data and trends in incompatible trace element ratios indicate that all the magmas in the complex were derived from the same mantle source components, during the same melting episode. By quantitative isotopic modelling of mixing processes, we constrain the Doros parental magma to comprise 60–80% melt of a depleted asthenospheric mantle component and 20–40% melt of a more enriched, Tristan plume-derived, asthenospheric component. No lithospheric mantle component is required to explain the Doros magma compositions. The chilled margin to the complex is the only rock type that shows evidence of significant continental crustal contamination, by assimilation of the metasedimentary host-rock upon emplacement. The identification of a substantial Tristan plume component in the Doros source confirms the integral role of the deep-seated thermal anomaly in Paraná–Etendeka magmatism. We show, in addition, that the Doros suite has consistent, strong geochemical affinities with the Tafelkop group ‘ferropicrite’ lavas of the Etendeka Province. This provides crucial evidence in support of Doros as the eruptive site for the Tafelkop lavas, thereby linking the Doros magmatism to the earliest eruptive phase in the Etendeka event. The distinctive chemistry of this magma group has been attributed to relatively deep decompression melting of pyroxenite-bearing material in the heterogeneous Tristan plume head, related to the initial impact of the plume on the base of the lithosphere. KW - radiogenic isotopes KW - ferropicrite magmas KW - layered mafic intrusion KW - Tristan mantle plume KW - Parana-Etendeka Large Igneous Province Y1 - 2017 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1093/petrology/egx021 SN - 0022-3530 SN - 1460-2415 VL - 58 IS - 3 SP - 423 EP - 442 PB - Oxford Univ. Press CY - Oxford ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Ishizuka, Osamu A1 - Hickey-Vargas, Rosemary A1 - Arculus, Richard J. A1 - Yogodzinski, Gene M. A1 - Savov, Ivan P. A1 - Kusano, Yuki A1 - McCarthy, Anders A1 - Brandl, Philipp A. A1 - Sudo, Masafumi T1 - Age of Izu-Bonin-Mariana arc basement JF - Earth & planetary science letters N2 - Documenting the early tectonic and magmatic evolution of the lzu-Bonin-Mariana (IBM) arc system in the Western Pacific is critical for understanding the process and cause of subduction initiation along the current convergent margin between the Pacific and Philippine Sea plates. Forearc igneous sections provide firm evidence for seafloor spreading at the time of subduction initiation (52 Ma) and production of "forearc basalt". Ocean floor drilling (International Ocean Discovery Program Expedition 351) recovered basement-forming, low-Ti tholeiitic basalt crust formed shortly after subduction initiation but distal from the convergent margin (nominally reararc) of the future IBM arc (Amami Sankaku Basin: ASB). Radiometric dating of this basement gives an age range (49.3-46.8 Ma with a weighted average of 48.7 Ma) that overlaps that of basalt in the present-day IBM forearc, but up to 3.3 m.y. younger than the onset of forearc basalt activity. Similarity in age range and geochemical character between the reararc and forearc basalts implies that the ocean crust newly formed by seafloor spreading during subduction initiation extends from fore-to reararc of the present-day IBM arc. Given the age difference between the oldest forearc basalt and the ASB crust, asymmetric spreading caused by ridge migration might have taken place. This scenario for the formation of the ASB implies that the Mesozoic remnant arc terrane of the Daito Ridges comprised the overriding plate at subduction initiation. The juxtaposition of a relatively buoyant remnant arc terrane adjacent to an oceanic plate was more favourable for subduction initiation than would have been the case if both downgoing and overriding plates had been oceanic. (C) 2017 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. KW - subduction initiation KW - Izu-Bonin-Mariana arc KW - arc basement KW - Ar-40/Ar-39 age Y1 - 2017 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.epsl.2017.10.023 SN - 0012-821X SN - 1385-013X VL - 481 SP - 80 EP - 90 PB - Elsevier CY - Amsterdam ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Karo, Nihad M. A1 - Oberhänsli, Roland A1 - Aqrawi, Ahmed M. A1 - Elias, Elias M. A1 - Aswad, Khalid J. A1 - Sudo, Masafumi T1 - New Ar-40/Ar-39 age constraints on cooling and unroofing history of the metamorphic host rocks (and igneous intrusion associates) from the Bulfat Complex (Bulfat area), NE-Iraq JF - Arabian journal of geosciences N2 - The Northern Zagros Suture Zone (NZSZ), formed as a result of the collision between Arabian and Sanandaj-Sirjan microplate, is considered as part of the Zagros orogenic belt. NZSZ is marked by two allochthonous thrust sheets in upward stacking order: lower and upper allochthon. The Bulfat complex is a part of the upper allochthon or "Ophiolite-bearing terrane" of Albian-Cenomenion age (97-105 Ma). Voluminous highly sheared serpentinites associated with ophiolites occur within this upper allochthon. In addition, the Gemo-Qandil Group is characterized by gabbroic to dioritic Bulfat intrusion with a crystallization age spanning from similar to 45 to similar to 40 Ma, as well as extensive metapelites with contact to the Walash-Naupurdam metavolcanic rocks. Due to the deformation in the Sanandaj-Sirjan Zone along the eastern side of the Iraqi segment of NZSZ, the Gemo-Qandil Group was regionally metamorphosed during late Cretaceous (similar to 80 Ma). This tectono-compressional dynamics ultimately caused an oscillatory deformation against Arabian continental margin deposits as well. During these events, gabbro-diorite intrusion with high-grade contact metamorphic aureoles occurred near Bulfat. Thus, there is an overlap between regional and contact metamorphic conditions in the area. The earlier metamorphic characteristic can be seen only in places where the latter contact influence was insignificant. Generally, this can only observed at a distance of more than 2.5 km from the contact. According to petrographic details and field observations, the thermally metamorphosed metapelitic units of the metasediment have been completely assimilated, with only some streaks of biotite and relicts of initial foliation. They strongly resemble amphibolite-grade slices from the regional metamorphic rocks in the region. Metapelitic samples far from the intrusion give similar biotite cooling ages as the intrusive rocks. Thus, they may be affected by the same thermal event. Ar-40/Ar-39 dating of biotite in metapelite rocks of Bulfat by step-wise heating with laser gave average weighted isotopic ages of 34.78 +/- 0.06 Ma. This is interpreted as crystallization/recrystallization age of biotite possibly representing the time of cooling and uplift history of the Bulfat intrusion. Cooling and exhumation rates for the Bulfat gabbro-diorite rocks were estimated as similar to 400 A degrees C/Ma and similar to 3.3 mm/year respectively. According to petrographic details, field observations and Ar/Ar dating concerning the contact metamorphism near Bulfat due to the gabbro-diorite intrusion, no significant deformation is visible during exhumation processes after the Paleogene tectono-thermal event, indicating that isotopic ages of 34.78 +/- 0.06 Ma could mark the timing of termination of the island arc activity in the Ophiolite-bearing terrane (upper allochthon). KW - Iraq KW - Bulfat KW - Metapelites KW - Northern Zagros Suture Zone (NZSZ) KW - Ar-40/Ar-39 KW - Cooling and unroofing history Y1 - 2018 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1007/s12517-018-3571-x SN - 1866-7511 SN - 1866-7538 VL - 11 IS - 10 PB - Springer CY - Heidelberg ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Halama, Ralf A1 - Glodny, Johannes A1 - Konrad-Schmolke, Matthias A1 - Sudo, Masafumi T1 - Rb-Sr and in situ Ar-40/Ar-39 dating of exhumation-related shearing and fluid-induced recrystallization in the Sesia zone (Western Alps, Italy) JF - Geosphere N2 - The Sesia zone in the Italian Western Alps is a piece of continental crust that has been subducted to eclogite-facies conditions and records a complex metamorphic history. The exact timing of events and the significance of geochronological information are debated due to the interplay of tectonic, metamorphic, and metasomatic processes. Here we present new geochronological data using Rb-Sr internal mineral isochrons and in situ Ar-40/Ar-39 laser ablation data to provide constraints on the relative importance of fluid-mediated mineral replacement reactions and diffusion for the interpretation of radiogenic isotope signatures, and on the use of these isotopic systems for dating metamorphic and variably deformed rocks. Our study focuses on the shear zone at the contact between two major lithological units of the Sesia zone, the eclogitic micaschists and the gneiss minuti. Metasedimentary rocks of the eclogitic micaschists unit contain phengite with step-like zoning in major element chemistry as evidence for petrologic disequilibrium. Distinct Ar-40/Ar-39 spot ages of relict phengite cores and over-printed rims demonstrate the preservation of individual age domains in the crystals. The eclogitic micaschists also show systematic Sr isotope disequilibria among different phengite populations, so that minimum ages of relict assemblage crystallization can be differentiated from the timing of late increments of deformation. The preservation of these disequilibrium features shows the lack of diffusive re-equilibration and underpins that fluid-assisted dissolution and recrystallization reactions are the main factors controlling the isotope record in these subduction-related metamorphic rocks. Blueschist-facies mylonites record deformation along the major shear zone that separates the eclogitic micaschists from the gneiss minuti. Two Rb-Sr isochrones that comprise several white mica fractions and glaucophane constrain the timing of this deformation and accompanying near-complete blueschist-facies re-equilibration of the Rb-Sr system to 60.1 +/- 0.9 Ma and 60.9 +/- 2.1 Ma, respectively. Overlapping ages in eclogitic micaschists of 60.1 +/- 1.1 (Rb-Sr isochron of sheared matrix assemblage), 58.6 +/- 0.8, and 60.9 +/- 0.4 Ma (white mica Ar-40/Ar-39 inverse isochron ages) support the significance of this age and show that fluid-rock interaction and partial re-equilibration occurred as much as several kilometers away from the shear zone. An earlier equilibration during high-pressure conditions in the eclogitic mica schists is recorded in minimum Rb-Sr ages for relict assemblages (77.2 +/- 0.8 and 72.4 +/- 1.1 Ma) and an Ar-40/Ar-39 inverse isochron age of 75.4 +/- 0.8 Ma for white mica cores, again demonstrating that the two isotope systems provide mutually supporting geochronological information. Local reactivation and recrystallization along the shear zone lasted >15 m.y., as late increments of deformation are recorded in a greenschist-facies mylonite by a Rb-Sr isochron age of 46.5 +/- 0.7 Ma. Y1 - 2018 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1130/GES01521.1 SN - 1553-040X VL - 14 IS - 4 SP - 1425 EP - 1450 PB - American Institute of Physics CY - Boulder ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Willner, Arne P. A1 - van Staal, Cees R. A1 - Zagorevski, A. A1 - Glodny, Johannes A1 - Romer, Rolf L. A1 - Sudo, Masafumi T1 - Tectonometamorphic evolution along the Iapetus suture zone in Newfoundland BT - Evidence for polyphase Salinic, Acadian and Neoacadian very low- to medium-grade metamorphism and deformation JF - Tectonophysics : international journal of geotectonics and the geology and physics of the interior of the earth N2 - The Red Indian Line (RIL) in central Newfoundland is the suture, where the main tract of the Iapetus Ocean was closed at similar to 452 Ma during accretion of the peri-Gondwanan Victoria arc with the composite active Laurentian margin. The protracted deformation history of this soft collision started at similar to 471 Ma with accretion of oceanic terranes to the active composite Laurentian margin. After Iapetus closure both colliding active margins were progressively deformed and metamorphosed during Silurian and Devonian (Salinic, Acadian and Neoacadian orogenic cycles). Peak conditions of the very low- to medium-grade, heterogeneously distributed metamorphism were determined by pseudosection techniques within the range of 2-7 kbar, 230-450 degrees C during increase of the metamorphic field gradient from similar to 12 degrees C/km to similar to 32 degrees C/km over time. Multiple metamorphic crystallisation stages were dated by white mica Ar-40/Ar-39 spot and plateau ages, additional Rb-Sr mineral isochrons involving white mica and one U/Pb age of titanite. All resulting ages between 439 +/- 4 Ma and 356 +/- 16 Ma postdate the closure of Iapetus. Results differ along two transects: The oldest ages of 443-421 Ma (Salinic orogenic cycle) were observed along the northern transect through the RIL zone with minimal younger overprint. Hence low temperature, intermediate to high pressure conditions (4.0-7.0 kbar, 230-340 degrees C) achieved during Taconic-Salinic underthrusting are well preserved. During Acadian dextral transpression the Taconic-Salinic structural wedge was tilted subvertically. In contrast, rocks along the southern transect through the RIL zone mainly show Acadian ages of 408-390 Ma with local preservation of older ages. Acadian deformation occurred under low temperature/low pressure conditions (similar to 250-450 degrees C, 2.5-4.6 kbar). Also Silurian terrestrial cover rocks were buried under these conditions. Acadian-Neoacadian deformation (393-340 Ma) becomes younger towards the northwest and progressively localized in transcurrent fault zones. This final foreland deformation at shallow crustal level established the Acadian/Neoacadian orogenic front in central Newfoundland slightly northwest of the RIL. KW - IAPETUS suture KW - PT pseudosection KW - White mica Ar-40/ Ar-39 spot ages KW - Rb-Sr mineral isochron KW - U/Pb dating of titanite KW - Salinic KW - Acadian KW - Neoacadian orogenic cycles Y1 - 2018 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tecto.2018.05.023 SN - 0040-1951 SN - 1879-3266 VL - 742 SP - 137 EP - 167 PB - Elsevier CY - Amsterdam ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Sokol, Krzysztof A1 - Halama, Ralf A1 - Meliksetian, Khachatur A1 - Savov, Ivan P. A1 - Navasardyan, Gevorg A1 - Sudo, Masafumi T1 - Alkaline magmas in zones of continental convergence BT - the Tezhsar volcano-intrusive ring complex, Armenia JF - Lithos : an international journal of mineralogy, petrology, and geochemistry N2 - Alkaline igneous rocks are relatively rare in settings of tectonic convergence and little is known about their petrogenesis in these settings. This study aims to contribute to a better understanding of the formation of alkaline igneous rocks by an investigation of the Tezhsar volcano-intrusive alkaline ring complex (TAC) in the Armenian Lesser Caucasus, which is located between the converging Eurasian and Arabian plates. We present new petrological, geochemical and Sr Nd isotope data for the TAC to constrain magma genesis and magma source characteristics. Moreover, we provide a new Ar-40/Ar-39 age of 41.0 +/- 0.5 Ma on amphibole from a nepheline syenite that is integrated into the regional context of ongoing regional convergence and widespread magmatism. The TAC is spatially concentric and measures similar to 10 km in diameter representing the relatively shallow plumbing system of a major stratovolcano juxtaposed by ring faulting with its extrusive products. The plutonic units comprise syenites and nepheline syenites, whereas the extrusive units are dominated by trachytic-phonolitic rocks. The characteristic feature of the TAC is the development of pseudomorphs after leucite in all types of the volcanic, subvolcanic and intrusive alkaline rocks. Whole-rock major element data show a metaluminous (Alkalinity Index = 0-0.1), alkalic and silica-undersaturated (Feldspathoid Silica-Saturation Index <0) character of the TAC. The general trace element enrichment and strong fractionation of REEs (La-N/Yb-N up to 70) indicate a relatively enriched magma source and small degrees of partial melting. All TAC rocks show a negative Nb Ta anomalies typical of subduction zone settings. The initial 87Sr/85Sr ratios (0.704-0.705) and positive sNd values (+3 to +5) indicate an isotopically depleted upper mantle and lack of significant crustal influence, which in turn suggests the TAC magma has formed via differentiation from lithospheric mantle melts. KW - Alkaline igneous rocks KW - Ring complex KW - Armenia KW - Geochemistry KW - Ar-40/Ar-39 dating KW - Pseudoleucite Y1 - 2018 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.lithos.2018.08.028 SN - 0024-4937 SN - 1872-6143 VL - 320 SP - 172 EP - 191 PB - Elsevier CY - Amsterdam ER - TY - GEN A1 - Bobos, Iuliu A1 - Goncalves, Ana A1 - Lima, Luis A1 - Noronha, Fernando A1 - Sudo, Masafumi T1 - Micas Ar-40/Ar-39 dating of hydrothermal events related with the post-orogenic W (+/- Sn), (Cu, Mo) mineralization from Borralha, Northern Portugal T2 - Life with Ore Deposits on Earth – 15th SGA Biennial Meeting 2019, N2 - Secondary mica minerals collected from the Santa Helena (W- (Cu) mineralization) and Venise (W-Mo mineralization) endogenic breccia structures were Ar-40/Ar-39 dated. The muscovite Ar-40/Ar-39 data yielded 286.8 +/- 1.2 (+/- 1 sigma) Ma (samples 6Ha and 11Ha) which reflect the age of secondary muscovite formation probably from magmatic biotite or feldspar alteration. Sericite Ar-40/Ar-39 data yielded 280.9 +/- 1.2 (+/- 1 sigma) Ma to 279.0 +/- 1.1 (+/- 1 sigma) Ma (samples 6Hb and 11Hb) reflecting the age of greisen alteration (T similar to 300 degrees C) where the W- disseminated mineralization occurs. The muscovite 40Ar/39Ar data of 277.3 +/- 1.3 (+/- 1 sigma) Ma and 281.3 +/- 1.2 (+/- 1 sigma) Ma (samples 5 and 6) also reflect the age of muscovite (selvage) crystallized adjacent to molybdenite veins within the Venise breccia. Geochronological data obtained confirmed that the W mineralization at Santa Helena breccia is older than Mo-mineralization at Venise breccia. Also, the timing of hydrothermal circulation and the cooling history for the W-stage deposition was no longer than 7 Ma and 4 Ma for Mo-deposition. Y1 - 2019 UR - https://www.researchgate.net/publication/337901420_Micas_40_Ar_39_Ar_dating_of_hydrothermal_events_related_with_the_post-orogenic_W_Sn_Cu_Mo_mineralization_from_Borralha_Northern_Portugal IS - 1 SP - 353 EP - 356 PB - SGA Soc Geology Applied mineral depositis CY - Geneva ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Trumbull, Robert B. A1 - Sudo, Masafumi A1 - Harris, C. A1 - Armstrong, R. A. A1 - de Beer, C. H. T1 - The age of the Koegel Fontein anorogenic complex, South Africa, and its relationship to the regional timing of magmatism and breakup along the South Atlantic rifted margin JF - South African Journal of Geology N2 - The early Cretaceous Koegel Fontein intrusive complex is situated near the Atlantic coast in South Africa, about 350 km northwest of Cape Town. The complex comprises felsic units of granite and syenite with compositionally related dykes, and a single intrusive plug of diorite. Existing zircon U-Pb ages of 144 +/- 2 Ma for the syenite and 133.9 +/- 1.3 Ma for the granite suggest that the emplacement of the complex took place over a period of about 10 My. This study provides additional and independent ages of the Koegel Fontein complex by Ar-40/Ar-39 dating to confirm the onset and duration of magmatism and better define the sequence of igneous units that comprise it. New laser step-heating Ar-40/Ar-3(9) ages on plagioclase and biotite from the main intrusive units in the complex are presented here, including samples previously dated by U-Pb dating. The Ar-40/Ar-39 ages for the granite and syenite units (131.1 +/- 0.9 Ma and 143.3 +/- 0.9, respectively) are in good agreement with the zircon U-Pb ages. Other units not previously dated include the Rooivleitjie alkaline granite (150.7 +/- 0.6 Ma), two quartz-porphyry dykes (143.0 +/- 0.9 and 139.4 +/- 1.7 Ma) and the Zout Rivier diorite plug (133.0 +/- 1.0 Ma). The new results confirm an early onset of magmatism at Koegel Fontein relative to that of the Etendeka Province some 1000 km to the north, which is consistent with the regional south-to-north propagation of South Atlantic rifting. The youngest Ar-40/Ar-3(9) ages at Koegel Fontein (134 to 131 Ma, Rietpoort Granite and 133 Ma, Zout Rivier diorite) correspond to the age of the first magnetic seafloor-spreading anomaly offshore, and we suggest that the longevity of Koegel Fontein magmatism relates to a superposition of pre-drift magmatism onshore and spreading-related magmatism as continental separation began. Y1 - 2019 U6 - https://doi.org/10.25131/sajg.122.0007 SN - 1012-0750 SN - 1996-8590 VL - 122 IS - 1 SP - 69 EP - 78 PB - Geological Society of South Africa CY - Marshalltown ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Fairey, Brenton J. A1 - Timmerman, Martin Jan A1 - Sudo, Masafumi A1 - Tsikos, Harilaos T1 - The role of hydrothermal activity in the formation of Karst-hosted manganese deposits of the Postmasburg Mn Field, Northern Cape Province, South Africa JF - Minerals N2 - The Postmasburg Manganese Field (PMF), Northern Cape Province, South Africa, once represented one of the largest sources of manganese ore worldwide. Two belts of manganese ore deposits have been distinguished in the PMF, namely the Western Belt of ferruginous manganese ores and the Eastern Belt of siliceous manganese ores. Prevailing models of ore formation in these two belts invoke karstification of manganese-rich dolomites and residual accumulation of manganese wad which later underwent diagenetic and low-grade metamorphic processes. For the most part, the role of hydrothermal processes and metasomatic alteration towards ore formation has not been adequately discussed. Here we report an abundance of common and some rare Al-, Na-, K- and Ba-bearing minerals, particularly aegirine, albite, microcline, banalsite, serandite-pectolite, paragonite and natrolite in Mn ores of the PMF, indicative of hydrothermal influence. Enrichments in Na, K and/or Ba in the ores are generally on a percentage level for most samples analysed through bulk-rock techniques. The presence of As-rich tokyoite also suggests the presence of As and V in the hydrothermal fluid. The fluid was likely oxidized and alkaline in nature, akin to a mature basinal brine. Various replacement textures, particularly of Na- and K- rich minerals by Ba-bearing phases, suggest sequential deposition of gangue as well as ore-minerals from the hydrothermal fluid, with Ba phases being deposited at a later stage. The stratigraphic variability of the studied ores and their deviation from the strict classification of ferruginous and siliceous ores in the literature, suggests that a re-evaluation of genetic models is warranted. New Ar-Ar ages for K-feldspars suggest a late Neoproterozoic timing for hydrothermal activity. This corroborates previous geochronological evidence for regional hydrothermal activity that affected Mn ores at the PMF but also, possibly, the high-grade Mn ores of the Kalahari Manganese Field to the north. A revised, all-encompassing model for the development of the manganese deposits of the PMF is then proposed, whereby the source of metals is attributed to underlying carbonate rocks beyond the Reivilo Formation of the Campbellrand Subgroup. The main process by which metals are primarily accumulated is attributed to karstification of the dolomitic substrate. The overlying Asbestos Hills Subgroup banded iron formation (BIF) is suggested as a potential source of alkali metals, which also provides a mechanism for leaching of these BIFs to form high-grade residual iron ore deposits. KW - manganese ore KW - Postmasburg manganese field KW - hydrothermal KW - karst KW - South Africa Y1 - 2019 U6 - https://doi.org/10.3390/min9070408 SN - 2075-163X VL - 9 IS - 7 PB - MDPI CY - Basel ER - TY - GEN A1 - Fairey, Brenton J. A1 - Timmerman, Martin Jan A1 - Sudo, Masafumi A1 - Tsikos, Harilaos T1 - The role of hydrothermal activity in the formation of Karst-hosted manganese deposits of the Postmasburg Mn Field, Northern Cape Province, South Africa T2 - Postprints der Universität Potsdam : Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe N2 - The Postmasburg Manganese Field (PMF), Northern Cape Province, South Africa, once represented one of the largest sources of manganese ore worldwide. Two belts of manganese ore deposits have been distinguished in the PMF, namely the Western Belt of ferruginous manganese ores and the Eastern Belt of siliceous manganese ores. Prevailing models of ore formation in these two belts invoke karstification of manganese-rich dolomites and residual accumulation of manganese wad which later underwent diagenetic and low-grade metamorphic processes. For the most part, the role of hydrothermal processes and metasomatic alteration towards ore formation has not been adequately discussed. Here we report an abundance of common and some rare Al-, Na-, K- and Ba-bearing minerals, particularly aegirine, albite, microcline, banalsite, sérandite-pectolite, paragonite and natrolite in Mn ores of the PMF, indicative of hydrothermal influence. Enrichments in Na, K and/or Ba in the ores are generally on a percentage level for most samples analysed through bulk-rock techniques. The presence of As-rich tokyoite also suggests the presence of As and V in the hydrothermal fluid. The fluid was likely oxidized and alkaline in nature, akin to a mature basinal brine. Various replacement textures, particularly of Na- and K- rich minerals by Ba-bearing phases, suggest sequential deposition of gangue as well as ore-minerals from the hydrothermal fluid, with Ba phases being deposited at a later stage. The stratigraphic variability of the studied ores and their deviation from the strict classification of ferruginous and siliceous ores in the literature, suggests that a re-evaluation of genetic models is warranted. New Ar-Ar ages for K-feldspars suggest a late Neoproterozoic timing for hydrothermal activity. This corroborates previous geochronological evidence for regional hydrothermal activity that affected Mn ores at the PMF but also, possibly, the high-grade Mn ores of the Kalahari Manganese Field to the north. A revised, all-encompassing model for the development of the manganese deposits of the PMF is then proposed, whereby the source of metals is attributed to underlying carbonate rocks beyond the Reivilo Formation of the Campbellrand Subgroup. The main process by which metals are primarily accumulated is attributed to karstification of the dolomitic substrate. The overlying Asbestos Hills Subgroup banded iron formation (BIF) is suggested as a potential source of alkali metals, which also provides a mechanism for leaching of these BIFs to form high-grade residual iron ore deposits. T3 - Zweitveröffentlichungen der Universität Potsdam : Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe - 966 KW - manganese ore KW - Postmasburg manganese field KW - hydrothermal KW - karst KW - South Africa Y1 - 2020 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-473304 SN - 1866-8372 IS - 966 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Aramayo, Alejandro A1 - Guzman, Silvina A1 - Hongn, Fernando D. A1 - del Papa, Cecilia A1 - Montero-Lopez, Carolina A1 - Sudo, Masafumi T1 - A Middle Miocene (13.5-12 Ma) deformational event constrained by volcanism along the Puna-Eastern Cordillera border, NW Argentina JF - Tectonophysics : international journal of geotectonics and the geology and physics of the interior of the earth N2 - The features of Middle Miocene deposits in the Puna-Eastern Cordillera transition (Valles Calchaquies) indicate that Cenozoic deformation, sedimentation and volcanism follow a complex spatiotemporal relationship. The intense volcanic activity recorded in the eastern Puna border between 14 and 11.5 Ma coincides with the occurrence of one of the most important deformation events of the Neogene tectonic evolution in the region. Studies performed across the Puna-Eastern Cordillera transition show different relationships between volcanic deposits of ca. 13.5-12.1 Ma and the Oligocene-Miocene Angastaco Formation. In this paper we describe the ash-flow tuff deposits which are the first of this type found concordant in the sedimentary fill of Valles Calchaquies. Several analyses performed on these pyroclastic deposits allow a correlation to be made with the Alto de Las Lagunas Ignimbrite (ca. 13.5 Ma) of the Pucarilla-Cerro Tipillas Volcanic Complex located in the Puna. Outcrops of the ca. 13.5 Ma pyroclastic deposits are recognised within the Puna and the Valle Calchaqui. However, in the southern prolongation of the Valle de Hualfin (Tiopampa-Pucarilla depression) that separates the Puna from the Valle Calchaqui at these latitudes, these deposits are partially eroded and buried, and thus their occurrence is recorded only by abundant volcanic clasts included in conglomerates of the Angastaco Formation. The sedimentation of the Angastaco Formation was aborted at ca. 12 Ma in the Tiopampa-Pucarilla depression by the Pucarilla Ignimbrite, which unconformably covers the synorogenic units. On the contrary, in the Valle Calchaqui the sedimentation of the Angastaco Formation continued until the Late Miocene. The different relationships between the Miocene Angastaco Formation and the ignimbrites with ages of ca. 13.5 and ca. 12 Ma reveal that in this short period (-1.5 m.y.) a significant deformation event took place and resulted in marked palaeogeographic changes, as evidenced by stratigraphic-sedimentological and chronological records in the Angastaco Formation. (C) 2017 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved. KW - Angastaco Formation KW - Miocene deformation KW - Alto de Las Lagunas Ignimbrite KW - Luingo caldera KW - Foreland Y1 - 2017 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tecto.2017.02.018 SN - 0040-1951 SN - 1879-3266 VL - 703 SP - 9 EP - 22 PB - Elsevier CY - Amsterdam ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Guzman, Silvina A1 - Strecker, Manfred A1 - Marti, Joan A1 - Petrinovic, Ivan A. A1 - Schildgen, Taylor F. A1 - Grosse, Pablo A1 - Montero-Lopez, Carolina A1 - Neri, Marco A1 - Carniel, Roberto A1 - D. Hongn, Fernando A1 - Muruaga, Claudia A1 - Sudo, Masafumi T1 - Construction and degradation of a broad volcanic massif: The Vicuna Pampa volcanic complex, southern Central Andes, NW Argentina JF - Geological Society of America bulletin N2 - The Vicuna Pampa volcanic complex, at the SE edge of the arid Puna Plateau of the Central Andes, records the interplay between volcanic construction and degra-dational processes. The low-sloping Vicuna Pampa volcanic complex, with a 1200-m-deep, southeastward-opening depression, was previously interpreted as a collapse caldera based on morphological considerations. However, characteristic features associated with collapse calderas do not exist, and close inspection instead suggests that the Vicuna Pampa volcanic complex is a strongly eroded, broad, massif-type composite volcano of mainly basaltic to trachyandesitic composition. Construction of the Vicuna Pampa volcanic complex occurred during two distinct cycles separated by the development of the depression. The first and main cycle took place at ca. 12 Ma and was dominated by lava flows and subordinate scoria cones and domes. The second cycle, possibly late Miocene in age, affected the SW portion of the depression with the emplacement of domes. We interpret the central depression as the result of a possible sector collapse and subsequent intense fluvial erosion during middle to late Miocene time, facilitated by faulting, steepened topography, and wetter climate conditions compared to today. We estimate that similar to 65% of the initial edifice of similar to 240 km(3) was degraded. The efficiency of degradation processes for removing mass from the Vicuna Pampa volcanic complex is surprising, considering that today the region is arid, and the stream channels within the complex are predominantly transport limited, forming a series of coalesced, aggraded alluvial fans and eolian infill. Hence, the Vicuna Pampa volcanic complex records the effects of past degradation efficiency that differs substantially from that of today. Y1 - 2017 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1130/B31631.1 SN - 0016-7606 SN - 1943-2674 VL - 129 SP - 750 EP - 766 PB - American Institute of Physics CY - Boulder ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Spinola, Diogo Noses A1 - Pi-Puig, Teresa A1 - Solleiro-Rebolledo, Elizabeth A1 - Egli, Markus A1 - Sudo, Masafumi A1 - Sedov, Sergey A1 - Kühn, Peter T1 - Origin of clay minerals in Early Eocene volcanic paleosols on King George Island, Maritime Antarctica JF - Scientific reports N2 - The paleoclimate during the Early Eocene in Maritime Antarctica is characterized by cool conditions without a pronounced dry season. Soils formed on volcanic material under such climate conditions in modern analogue environments are usually Andosols rich in nanocrystalline minerals without pedogenic smectite. The paleosols formed on volcanic material on King Georges Island are covered by basalts, dated by 6 new 40Ar/39Ar datings to 51-48 Ma, and are rich in smectite. A pedogenic origin of the smectites would suggest a semi-arid rather than a wet non-seasonal humid paleoclimate. To investigate the origin of the smectites in these paleosols we used X-ray diffraction and microscopic techniques. Minor mineralogical changes between the volcanic parent material and the paleosols and a homogenous distribution of smectites throughout the paleosol horizons indicate that these smectites were mainly inherited from the pyroclastic parent material, which was altered prior to surficial weathering. Nevertheless, the mineralogical properties, such as degree of crystallinity and octahedral site occupancy, of these smectites were modified during the ancient soil formation. Our findings highlight that trioctahedral smectites were a product of deuteric alteration of pyroclastic rocks and were progressively transformed to dioctahedral smectites during weathering in a soil environment on King George Island. Y1 - 2017 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-017-06617-x SN - 2045-2322 VL - 7 PB - Nature Publ. Group CY - London ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Ballato, Paolo A1 - Cifelli, Francesca A1 - Heidarzadeh, Ghasem A1 - Ghassemi, Mohammad R. A1 - Wickert, Andrew D. A1 - Hassanzadeh, Jamshid A1 - Dupont-Nivet, Guillaume A1 - Balling, Philipp A1 - Sudo, Masafumi A1 - Zeilinger, Gerold A1 - Schmitt, Axel K. A1 - Mattei, Massimo A1 - Strecker, Manfred T1 - Tectono-sedimentary evolution of the northern Iranian Plateau: insights from middle-late Miocene foreland-basin deposits JF - Basin research N2 - Sedimentary basins in the interior of orogenic plateaus can provide unique insights into the early history of plateau evolution and related geodynamic processes. The northern sectors of the Iranian Plateau of the Arabia-Eurasia collision zone offer the unique possibility to study middle-late Miocene terrestrial clastic and volcaniclastic sediments that allow assessing the nascent stages of collisional plateau formation. In particular, these sedimentary archives allow investigating several debated and poorly understood issues associated with the long-term evolution of the Iranian Plateau, including the regional spatio-temporal characteristics of sedimentation and deformation and the mechanisms of plateau growth. We document that middle-late Miocene crustal shortening and thickening processes led to the growth of a basement-cored range (Takab Range Complex) in the interior of the plateau. This triggered the development of a foreland-basin (Great Pari Basin) to the east between 16.5 and 10.7Ma. By 10.7Ma, a fast progradation of conglomerates over the foreland strata occurred, most likely during a decrease in flexural subsidence triggered by rock uplift along an intraforeland basement-cored range (Mahneshan Range Complex). This was in turn followed by the final incorporation of the foreland deposits into the orogenic system and ensuing compartmentalization of the formerly contiguous foreland into several intermontane basins. Overall, our data suggest that shortening and thickening processes led to the outward and vertical growth of the northern sectors of the Iranian Plateau starting from the middle Miocene. This implies that mantle-flow processes may have had a limited contribution toward building the Iranian Plateau in NW Iran. Y1 - 2017 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1111/bre.12180 SN - 0950-091X SN - 1365-2117 VL - 29 SP - 417 EP - 446 PB - Wiley CY - Hoboken ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Pokorny, Richard A1 - Krmicek, Lukas A1 - Sudo, Masafumi T1 - An endemic ichnoassemblage from a late Miocene paleolake in SE Iceland JF - Palaeogeography, palaeoclimatology, palaeoecology : an international journal for the geo-sciences N2 - In Porisdalur valley, a small relict of a sedimentary body was identified in southeastern Iceland. It probably represents a remnant of the deep, tectonically arranged paleolake (Late Miocene, 8-9 Ma), and filled by volcaniclastic material from nearby, active volcanic centers. In the profile of tuffitic sandstone, siltstone and claystone, the ripple-bedding layers, molds and flute casts indicate periodic mass flow episodes. In the sedimentary profile, the characteristic arrangement of sediments is evident, showing features of the Bouma sequences. In the claystone layers, deposited during episodes of lowest kinetic energy, a specific ichnoassemblage was found, represented by Thorichnus ramosus igen. et isp. nov., T. corniculatus igen. et isp. nov., Mammillichnis jakubi isp. nov., Helminthoidichnites multilaqueatus comb. nov., Vamaspor jachymi igen. et isp. nov. and five preliminarily identified trace fossils. The assemblage belongs to Mermia ichnofacies, the nonmarine representative of an ichnofacies, developed in a turbiditic environment; most of identified trace fossils are so far endemic. (C) 2017 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved. KW - Turbidite KW - Mermia ichnofacies KW - Thorichnus-Vatnaspor ichnoassemblage Y1 - 2017 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.palaeo.2017.07.033 SN - 0031-0182 SN - 1872-616X VL - 485 SP - 761 EP - 773 PB - Elsevier CY - Amsterdam ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Engelhardt, Jonathan Franz A1 - Sudo, Masafumi A1 - Stockhecke, Mona A1 - Oberhaensli, Roland T1 - Feldspar Ar-40/(39) Ar dating of ICDP PALEOVAN cores JF - Geochimica et cosmochimica acta : journal of the Geochemical Society and the Meteoritical Society N2 - Eleven inverse isochron ages from total fusion and three from stepwise heating analyses fit the age model. Four experiments resulted in older inverse isochron ages that do not concur with the model within 2 sigma uncertainties and that deviate from 1 ka to 17 ka minimum. C-and R-type zoning are interpreted as representing growth in magma chamber cupolas, as wall mushes, or in narrow conduits. Persistent compositions of PO-type crystals and abundant surfaces recording dissolution features correspond to formation within a magma chamber. C-type zoning and R-type zoning have revealed an irregular incorporation of melt and fluid inclusions. These two types of zoning in feldspar are interpreted as preferentially contributing either heterogeneously distributed excess Ar-40 or inherited Ar-40 to the deviating Ar-40/Ar-39 ages that are discussed in this study. (C) 2017 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved. KW - Lake Van KW - Feldspar zoning KW - Lacustrine record KW - Volcaniclastics Y1 - 2017 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gca.2017.07.039 SN - 0016-7037 SN - 1872-9533 VL - 217 SP - 144 EP - 170 PB - Elsevier CY - Oxford ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Becerril, Laura A1 - Ubide, Teresa A1 - Sudo, Masafumi A1 - Marti, Joan A1 - Galindo, Ines A1 - Gale, Carlos A1 - Maria Morales, Jose A1 - Yepes, Jorge A1 - Lago, Marceliano T1 - Geochronological constraints on the evolution of El Hierro (Canary Islands) JF - Journal of African earth sciences N2 - New age data have been obtained to time constrain the recent Quaternary volcanism of El Hierro (Canary Islands) and to estimate its recurrence rate. We have carried out Ar-40/Ar-39 geochronology on samples spanning the entire volcanostratigraphic sequence of the island and C-14 geochronology on the most recent eruption on the northeast rift of the island: 2280 +/- 30 yr BP. We combine the new absolute data with a revision of published ages onshore, some of which were identified through geomorphological criteria (relative data). We present a revised and updated chronology of volcanism for the last 33 ka that we use to estimate the maximum eruptive recurrence of the island. The number of events per year determined is 9.7 x 10(-4) for the emerged part of the island, which means that, as a minimum, one eruption has occurred approximately every 1000 years. This highlights the need of more geochronological data to better constrain the eruptive recurrence of El Hierro. (C) 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved. KW - Ar-40/Ar-39 KW - C-14 KW - Eruptive recurrence KW - El Hierro KW - Canary Islands Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jafrearsci.2015.10.012 SN - 1464-343X SN - 1879-1956 VL - 113 SP - 88 EP - 94 PB - Elsevier CY - Oxford ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Scharf, Andreas A1 - Handy, Mark R. A1 - Schmid, Stefan M. A1 - Favaro, Silvia A1 - Sudo, Masafumi A1 - Schuster, Ralf A1 - Hammerschmidt, Konrad T1 - Grain-size effects on the closure temperature of white mica in a crustal-scale extensional shear - zone - Implications of in-situ Ar-40/Ar-39 laser-ablation of white mica for dating shearing and cooling (Tauern Window, Eastern Alps) JF - Tectonophysics : international journal of geotectonics and the geology and physics of the interior of the earth N2 - In-situ Ar-40/Ar-39 laser ablation dating of white-mica grains was performed on samples from the footwall of a crustal-scale extensional fault (Katschberg Normal Fault; KNF) that accommodated eastward orogen-parallel displacement of Alpine orogenic crust in the eastern part of the Tauern Window. This dating yields predominantly cooling ages ranging from 31 to 13 Myr, with most ages clustering between 21 and 17 Myr. Folded white micas that predate the main Katschberg foliation yield, within error, the same ages as white-mica grains that overgrow this foliation. However, the absolute ages of both generations are older at the base (20 Myr) where their grain size is larger (300-500 mu m), than at the top and adjacent to the hangingwall (17 Myr) of this shear zone where grain size is smaller (<100-300 mu m). This fining-upward trend of white-mica grain size within the KNF is associated with a reduction of the closure temperature from the base (similar to 445 degrees C) to the top (<400 degrees C) and explains the counter-intuitive trend of downward-increasing age of cooling in the footwall. The new data show that rapid cooling within the KNF of the eastern Tauern Window started sometime before 21 Myr according to the Ar-40/Ar-39 white-mica cooling ages and between 25-21 Myr according to the new Rb/Sr white-mica ages, i.e., shortly after the attainment of the thermal peak in the Tauern Window at similar to 25 Myr ago. These new data, combined with literature data, support earlier cooling in the eastern part of then Tauem Window than in the western part by some 3-5 Myr. (C) 2016 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved. KW - Eastern Alps KW - Ar-40/Ar-39 laser ablation KW - Closure temperature KW - Orogen-parallel lateral extrusion KW - Rapid exhumation/cooling Y1 - 2016 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.tecto.2016.02.014 SN - 0040-1951 SN - 1879-3266 VL - 674 SP - 210 EP - 226 PB - Elsevier CY - Amsterdam ER - TY - GEN A1 - Willner, Arne P. A1 - Massonne, Hans-Joachim A1 - Ring, Uwe A1 - Sudo, Masafumi A1 - Thomson, Stuart N. T1 - P–T evolution and timing of a late Palaeozoic fore-arc system and its heterogeneous Mesozoic overprint in north-central Chile (latitudes 31–32° S) T2 - Postprints der Universität Potsdam : Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe N2 - In the late Palaeozoic fore-arc system of north-central Chile at latitudes 31-32 degrees S (from the west to the east) three lithotectonic units are telescoped within a short distance by a Mesozoic strikeslip event (derived peak P-T conditions in brackets): (1) the basally accreted Choapa Metamorphic Complex (CMC; 350-430 degrees C, 6-9 kbar), (2) the frontally accreted Arrayan Formation (AF; 280-320 degrees C, 4-6 kbar) and (3) the retrowedge basin of the Huentelauquen Formation (HF; 280-320 degrees C, 3-4 kbar). In the CMC, Ar-Ar spot ages locally date white-mica formation at peak P-T conditions and during early exhumation at 279-242 Ma. In a local garnet mica-schist intercalation (570-585 degrees C, 11-13 kbar) Ar-Ar spot ages refer to the ascent from the subduction channel at 307-274 Ma. Portions of the CMC were isobarically heated to 510-580 degrees C at 6.6-8.5 kbar. The age of peak P-T conditions in the AF can only vaguely be approximated at >= 310 Ma by relict fission-track ages consistent with the observation that frontal accretion occurred prior to basal accretion. Zircon fission-track dating indicates cooling below similar to 280 degrees C at similar to 248 Ma in the CMC and the AF, when a regional unconformity also formed. Ar-Ar white-mica spot ages in parts of the CMC and within the entire AF and HF point to heterogeneous resetting during Mesozoic extensional and shortening events at similar to 245-240 Ma, similar to 210-200 Ma, similar to 174-159 Ma and similar to 142-127 Ma. The zircon fission-track ages are locally reset at 109-96 Ma. All resetting of Ar-Ar white-mica ages is proposed to have occurred by in situ dissolution/precipitation at low temperature in the presence of locally penetrating hydrous fluids. Hence syn-and postaccretionary events in the fore-arc system can still be distinguished and dated in spite of its complex heterogeneous postaccretional overprint. T3 - Zweitveröffentlichungen der Universität Potsdam : Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe - 597 KW - Ar-Ar white-mica dating KW - zircon fission-track dating KW - accretionary prism KW - frontal accretion KW - basal accretion KW - thermal overprint KW - age resetting Y1 - 2019 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-414909 SN - 1866-8372 IS - 597 ER - TY - GEN A1 - Willner, Arne P. A1 - Barr, Sandra M. A1 - Glodny, Johannes A1 - Massonne, Hans-Joachim A1 - Sudo, Masafumi A1 - Thomson, Stuart N. A1 - Van Staal, Cees R. A1 - White, Chris E. T1 - Effects of fluid flow, cooling and deformation as recorded by 40Ar/39Ar, Rb–Sr and zircon fission track ages in very low- to low-grade metamorphic rocks in Avalonian SE Cape Breton Island (Nova Scotia, Canada) T2 - Postprints der Universität Potsdam : Mathematisch Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe N2 - 40Ar/39Ar in situ UV laser ablation of white mica, Rb–Sr mineral isochrons and zircon fission track dating were applied to determine ages of very low- to low-grade metamorphic processes at 3.5±0.4 kbar, 280±30°C in the Avalonian Mira terrane of SE Cape Breton Island (Nova Scotia). The Mira terrane comprises Neoproterozoic volcanic-arc rocks overlain by Cambrian sedimentary rocks. Crystallization of metamorphic white mica was dated in six metavolcanic samples by 40Ar/39Ar spot age peaks between 396±3 and 363±14 Ma. Rb–Sr systematics of minerals and mineral aggregates yielded two isochrons at 389±7 Ma and 365±8 Ma, corroborating equilibrium conditions during very low- to low-grade metamorphism. The dated white mica is oriented parallel to foliations produced by sinistral strike-slip faulting and/or folding related to the Middle–Late Devonian transpressive assembly of Avalonian terranes during convergence and emplacement of the neighbouring Meguma terrane. Exhumation occurred earlier in the NW Mira terrane than in the SE. Transpression was related to the closure of the Rheic Ocean between Gondwana and Laurussia by NW-directed convergence. The 40Ar/39Ar spot age spectra also display relict age peaks at 477–465 Ma, 439 Ma and 420–428 Ma attributed to deformation and fluid access, possibly related to the collision of Avalonia with composite Laurentia or to earlier Ordovician–Silurian rifting. Fission track ages of zircon from Mira terrane samples range between 242±18 and 225±21 Ma and reflect late Palaeozoic reburial and reheating close to previous peak metamorphic temperatures under fluid-absent conditions during rifting prior to opening of the Central Atlantic Ocean. T3 - Zweitveröffentlichungen der Universität Potsdam : Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Reihe - 584 KW - Ar-40/Ar-39 spot ages KW - Avalonia KW - Devonian transpression KW - Rb-Sr mineral isochrons KW - Rheic Ocean KW - very low-low-grade metamorphism KW - zircon fission tracks Y1 - 2019 U6 - http://nbn-resolving.de/urn/resolver.pl?urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus4-414484 IS - 584 SP - 767 EP - 787 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Willner, Arne P. A1 - Barr, Sandra M. A1 - Glodny, Johannes A1 - Massonne, Hans-Joachim A1 - Sudo, Masafumi A1 - Thomson, Stuart N. A1 - Van Staal, Cees R. A1 - White, Chris E. T1 - Effects of fluid flow, cooling and deformation as recorded by Ar-40/Ar-39, Rb-Sr and zircon fission track ages in very low- to low-grade metamorphic rocks in Avalonian SE Cape Breton Island (Nova Scotia, Canada) JF - Geological magazine N2 - Ar-40/Ar-39 in situ UV laser ablation of white mica, Rb-Sr mineral isochrons and zircon fission track dating were applied to determine ages of very low- to low-grade metamorphic processes at 3.5 +/- 0.4 kbar, 280 +/- 30 degrees C in the Avalonian Mira terrane of SE Cape Breton Island (Nova Scotia). The Mira terrane comprises Neoproterozoic volcanic-arc rocks overlain by Cambrian sedimentary rocks. Crystallization of metamorphic white mica was dated in six metavolcanic samples by Ar-40/Ar-39 spot age peaks between 396 +/- 3 and 363 +/- 14 Ma. Rb-Sr systematics of minerals and mineral aggregates yielded two isochrons at 389 +/- 7 Ma and 365 +/- 8 Ma, corroborating equilibrium conditions during very low- to low-grade metamorphism. The dated white mica is oriented parallel to foliations produced by sinistral strike-slip faulting and/or folding related to the Middle-Late Devonian transpressive assembly of Avalonian terranes during convergence and emplacement of the neighbouring Meguma terrane. Exhumation occurred earlier in the NW Mira terrane than in the SE. Transpression was related to the closure of the Rheic Ocean between Gondwana and Laurussia by NW-directed convergence. The Ar-40/Ar-39 spot age spectra also display relict age peaks at 477-465 Ma, 439 Ma and 420-428 Ma attributed to deformation and fluid access, possibly related to the collision of Avalonia with composite Laurentia or to earlier Ordovician-Silurian rifting. Fission track ages of zircon from Mira terrane samples range between 242 +/- 18 and 225 +/- 21 Ma and reflect late Palaeozoic reburial and reheating close to previous peak metamorphic temperatures under fluid-absent conditions during rifting prior to opening of the Central Atlantic Ocean. KW - Ar-40/Ar-39 spot ages KW - Rb-Sr mineral isochrons KW - zircon fission tracks KW - very low-low-grade metamorphism KW - Avalonia KW - Devonian transpression KW - Rheic Ocean Y1 - 2015 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1017/S0016756814000508 SN - 0016-7568 SN - 1469-5081 VL - 152 IS - 5 SP - 767 EP - 787 PB - Cambridge Univ. Press CY - New York ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Aygül, Mesut A1 - Okay, Aral I. A1 - Oberhänsli, Roland A1 - Schmidt, Alexander A1 - Sudo, Masafumi T1 - Late Cretaceous infant intra-oceanic arc volcanism, the Central Pontides, Turkey: Petrogenetic and tectonic implications JF - Journal of Asian earth sciences N2 - A tectonic slice of an arc sequence consisting of low-grade metavolcanic rocks and overlying metasedimentary succession is exposed in the Central Pontides north of the Izmir-Ankara-Erzincan suture separating Laurasia from Gondwana-derived terranes. The metavolcanic rocks mainly consist of basaltic andesite/andesite and mafic cognate xenolith-bearing rhyolite with their pyroclastic equivalents, which are interbedded with recrystallized pelagic limestone and chert. The metasedimentary succession comprises recrystallized micritic limestone with rare volcanogenic metaclastic rocks and stratigraphically overlies the metavolcanic rocks. The geochemistry of the metavolcanic rocks indicates an arc setting evidenced by depletion of HFSE (Ti, P and Nb) and enrichment of fluid mobile LILE. Identical trace and rare earth elements compositions of basaltic andesites/andesites and rhyolites suggest that they are cogenetic and derived from a common parental magma. The arc sequence crops out between an Albian-Turonian subduction-accretionary complex representing the Laurasian active margin and an ophiolitic melange. Absence of continent derived detritus in the arc sequence and its tectonic setting in a wide Cretaceous accretionary complex suggest that the Kosdag Arc was intra-oceanic. Zircons from two metarhyolite samples give Late Cretaceous (93.8 +/- 1.9 and 94.4 +/- 1.9 Ma) U/Pb ages. These ages are the same as the age of the supra-subduction ophiolites in western Turkey, which implies that that the Kosdag Arc may represent part of the incipient arc formed during the generation of the supra-subduction ophiolites. The low-grade regional metamorphism in the Kosdag Arc is constrained to 69.9 +/- 0.4 Ma by Ar-40/Ar-39 muscovite dating indicating that the arc sequence became part of a wide Tethyan Cretaceous accretionary complex by the latest Cretaceous. Non-collisional cessation of the arc volcanism is possibly associated with southward migration of the magmatism as in the Izu-Bonin-Mariana arc system. (c) 2015 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved. KW - Intra-oceanic subduction KW - Felsic volcanism KW - Arc accretion KW - Ophiolite obduction Y1 - 2015 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jseaes.2015.07.005 SN - 1367-9120 SN - 1878-5786 VL - 111 SP - 312 EP - 327 PB - Elsevier CY - Oxford ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Ennis, Meg A1 - Meere, Patrick A. A1 - Timmerman, Martin Jan A1 - Sudo, Masafumi T1 - Post-Acadian sediment recycling in the Devonian Old Red Sandstone of Southern Ireland JF - Gondwana research : international geoscience journal ; official journal of the International Association for Gondwana Research N2 - The Upper Devonian Munster Basin of southern Ireland has traditionally been viewed as a post-orogenic molasse deposit that was sourced from the Caledonides of central Ireland and subsequently deformed by the end Carboniferous Variscan orogenic event. The basin fill is composed of super-mature quartz arenite sandstone that clearly represents a second cycle of deposition. The source of this detritus is now recognized as Lower Devonian Dingle Basin red bed sequences to the north. This genetic link is based on the degree of similarity in the detrital mica chemistry in both of these units; micas plot in identical fields and define the same trends. In addition, the two sequences show increased textural and chemical maturity up-sequence and define indistinguishable Ar-40/Ar-39 age ranges for the detrital mica grains. Partial resetting of the Ar ages can be attributed to elevated heat flow in the region caused by Munster Basin extension and subsequent Variscan deformation. The combined evidence from southwest Ireland therefore points to a Caledonian or possibly Taconian primary source area that initially shed detritus into the Lower Devonian Dingle Basin which was subsequently recycled into the Upper Devonian Munster Basin following mid-Devonian Acadian basin inversion. (C) 2014 International Association for Gondwana Research. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved. KW - Caledonian KW - Acadian KW - Variscan KW - Old Red Sandstone KW - Sediment recycling Y1 - 2015 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gr.2014.10.007 SN - 1342-937X SN - 1878-0571 VL - 28 IS - 4 SP - 1415 EP - 1433 PB - Elsevier CY - Amsterdam ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Lepetit, Petra A1 - Viereck, Lothar A1 - Piper, John D. A. A1 - Sudo, Masafumi A1 - Gurel, Ali A1 - Copuroglu, Ibrahim A1 - Gruber, Manuela A1 - Mayer, Bernhard A1 - Koch, Michael A1 - Tatar, Orhan A1 - Gursoy, Halil T1 - Ar-40/Ar-39 dating of ignimbrites and plinian air-fall layers from Cappadocia, Central Turkey: Implications to chronostratigraphic and Eastern Mediterranean palaeoenvironmental record JF - Chemie der Erde : interdisciplinary journal for chemical problems of the geo-sciences and geo-ecology N2 - Magmatism forming the Central Anatolian Volcanic Province of Cappadocia, central Turkey, records the last phase of Neotethyan subduction after similar to 11 Ma. Thirteen large calc-alkaline ignimbrite sheets form marker bands within the volcano-sedimentary succession (the Urgup Formation) and provide a robust chronostratigraphy for paleoecologic evaluation of the interleaved paleosols. This paper evaluates the chronologic record in the context of the radiometric, magnetostratigraphic and lithostratigraphic controls. Previous inconsistencies relating primarily to K/Ar evidence were reason for the initiation of an integrated study which includes Ar-40/Ar-39 dating, palaeomagnetic and stratigraphic evidence. The newly determined Ar-40/Ar-39-ages (Lepetit, 2010) are in agreement with Ar/Ar and U/Pb data meanwhile published by Pauquette and Le Pennec (2012) and Aydar et al. (2012). The Ar-40/Ar-39-ages restrict the end of the Urgup Formation to the late Miocene. The paleosol sequence enclosed by the ignimbrites is thus restricted to the late Miocene, the most intense formation of pedogene calcretes correlating with the Messinian Salinity Crisis. KW - Ar-40/Ar-39 dating KW - Tephrostratigraphy KW - Neogene KW - Cappadocia KW - Turkey Y1 - 2014 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.chemer.2014.05.001 SN - 0009-2819 SN - 1611-5864 VL - 74 IS - 3 SP - 471 EP - 488 PB - Elsevier CY - Jena ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Halama, Ralf A1 - Konrad-Schmolke, Matthias A1 - Sudo, Masafumi A1 - Marschall, Horst R. A1 - Wiedenbeck, Michael T1 - Effects of fluid-rock interaction on Ar-40/Ar-39 geochronology in high-pressure rocks (Sesia-Lanzo Zone, Western Alps) JF - Geochimica et cosmochimica acta : journal of the Geochemical Society and the Meteoritical Society N2 - In situ UV laser spot Ar-40/Ar-39 analyses of distinct phengite types in eclogite-facies rocks from the Sesia-Lanzo Zone (Western Alps, Italy) were combined with SIMS boron isotope analyses as well as boron (B) and lithium (Li) concentration data to link geochronological information with constraints on fluid-rock interaction. In weakly deformed samples, apparent Ar-40/Ar-39 ages of phengite cores span a range of similar to 20 Ma, but inverse isochrons define two distinct main high-pressure (HP) phengite core crystallization periods of 88-82 and 77-74 Ma, respectively. The younger cores have on average lower B contents (similar to 36 mu g/g) than the older ones (similar to 43-48 mu g/g), suggesting that loss of B and resetting of the Ar isotopic system were related. Phengite cores have variable delta B-11 values (-18 parts per thousand to -10 parts per thousand), indicating the lack of km scale B homogenization during HP crystallization. Overprinted phengite rims in the weakly deformed samples generally yield younger apparent Ar-40/Ar-39 ages than the respective cores. They also show variable effects of heterogeneous excess 40 Ar incorporation and Ar loss. One acceptable inverse isochron age of 77.1 +/- 1.1 Ma for rims surrounding older cores (82.6 +/- 0.6 Ma) overlaps with the second period of core crystallization. Compared to the phengite cores, all rims have lower B and Li abundances but similar delta B-11 values (-15 parts per thousand to -9 parts per thousand), reflecting internal redistribution of B and Li and internal fluid buffering of the B isotopic composition during rim growth. The combined observation of younger Ar-40/Ar-39 ages and boron loss, yielding comparable values of both parameters only in cores and rims of different samples, is best explained by a selective metasomatic overprint. In low permeability samples, this overprint caused recrystallization of phengite rims, whereas higher permeability in other samples led to complete recrystallization of phengite grains. Strongly deformed samples from a several km long, blueschist-facies shear zone contain mylonitic phengite that forms a tightly clustered group of relatively young apparent Ar-40/Ar-39 ages (64.7-68.8 Ma), yielding an inverse isochron age of 65.0 +/- 3.0 Ma. Almost complete B and Li removal in mylonitic phengite is due to leaching into a fluid. The B isotopic composition is significantly heavier than in phengites from the weakly deformed samples, indicating an external control by a high-delta B-11 fluid (delta B-11 = + 7 +/- 4 parts per thousand). We interpret this result as reflecting phengite recrystallization related to deformation and associated fluid flow in the shear zone. This event also caused partial resetting of the Ar isotope system and further B loss in more permeable rocks of the adjacent unit. We conclude that geochemical evidence for pervasive or limited fluid flow is crucial for the interpretation of Ar-40/Ar-39 data in partially metasomatized rocks. Y1 - 2014 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gca.2013.10.023 SN - 0016-7037 SN - 1872-9533 VL - 126 SP - 475 EP - 494 PB - Elsevier CY - Oxford ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Pingel, Heiko A1 - Alonso, Ricardo N. A1 - Mulch, Andreas A1 - Rohrmann, Alexander A1 - Sudo, Masafumi A1 - Strecker, Manfred T1 - Pliocene orographic barrier uplift in the southern Central Andes JF - Geology N2 - Sedimentary basin fills along the windward flanks of orogenic plateaus are valuable archives of paleoenvironmental change with the potential to resolve the history of surface uplift and orographic barrier formation. The intermontane basins of the southern Central Andes contain thick successions of sedimentary material that are commonly interbedded with datable volcanic ashes. We relate variations in the hydrogen isotopic composition of hydrated volcanic glass (delta D-g) of Neogene to Quaternary fills in the semiarid intermontane Humahuaca Basin (Eastern Cordillera, northwest Argentina) to spatiotemporal changes in topography and associated orographic effects. delta D values from volcanic glass in the basin strata (-117 parts per thousand to -98 parts per thousand) show two main trends that accompany observed tectonosedimentary events in the study area. Between 6.0 and 3.5 Ma, delta D-g values decrease by similar to 17 parts per thousand; this is associated with surface uplift in the catchment area. After 3.5 Ma, delta D-g values show abrupt deuterium enrichment, which we associate with (1) the attainment of threshold elevations for blocking moisture transport in the basin-bounding ranges to the east, and (2) the onset of semiarid conditions in the basin. Such orographic barriers throughout the eastern flanks of the Central Andes have impeded moisture transport into the orogen interior; this has likely helped maintain aridity and internal drainage conditions on the adjacent Andean Plateau. Y1 - 2014 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1130/G35538.1 SN - 0091-7613 SN - 1943-2682 VL - 42 IS - 8 SP - 691 EP - 694 PB - American Institute of Physics CY - Boulder ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Montero-Lopez, Carolina A1 - Strecker, Manfred A1 - Schildgen, Taylor F. A1 - Hongn, Fernando D. A1 - Guzman, Silvina A1 - Bookhagen, Bodo A1 - Sudo, Masafumi T1 - Local high relief at the southern margin of the Andean plateau by 9 Ma: evidence from ignimbritic valley fills and river incision JF - Terra nova N2 - A valley-filling ignimbrite re-exposed through subsequent river incision at the southern margin of the Andean (Puna) plateau preserves pristine geological evidence of pre-late Miocene palaeotopography in the north western Argentine Andes. Our new Ar-40/(39) Ar dating of the Las Papas Ignimbrites yields a plateau age of 9.24 +/- 0.03 Ma, indicating valley-relief and orographic-barrier conditions comparable to the present-day. A later infill of Plio-Pleistocene coarse conglomerates has been linked to wetter conditions, but resulted in no additional net incision of the Las Papas valley, considering that the base of the ignimbrite remains unexposed in the valley bottom. Our observations indicate that at least 550 m of local plateau margin relief (and likely > 2 km) existed by 9 Ma at the southern Puna margin, which likely aided the efficiency of the orographic barrier to rainfall along the eastern and south eastern flanks of the Puna and causes aridity in the plateau interior. Y1 - 2014 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1111/ter.12120 SN - 0954-4879 SN - 1365-3121 VL - 26 IS - 6 SP - 454 EP - 460 PB - Wiley-Blackwell CY - Hoboken ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Ballato, Paolo A1 - Uba, Cornelius Eji A1 - Landgraf, Angela A1 - Strecker, Manfred A1 - Sudo, Masafumi A1 - Stockli, Daniel F. A1 - Friedrich, Anke M. A1 - Tabatabaei, Saeid H. T1 - Arabia-Eurasia continental collision insights from late Tertiary foreland-basin evolution in the Alborz Mountains, northern Iran JF - Geological Society of America bulletin N2 - A poorly understood lag time of 15-20 m.y. exists between the initial Arabia-Eurasia continental collision in late Eocene to early Oligocene time and the acceleration of tectonic and sedimentary processes across the collision zone in the early to late Miocene. The late Eocene to Miocene-Pliocene clastic and shallow-marine sedimentary rocks of the Kond, Eyvanekey, and Semnan Basins in the Alborz Mountains (northern Iran) offer the possibility to track the evolution of this orogen in the framework of collision processes. A transition from volcaniclastic submarine deposits to shallow-marine evaporites and terrestrial sediments occurred shortly after 36 Ma in association with reversals in sediment provenance, strata tilting, and erosional unroofing. These events followed the termination of subduction arc magmatism and marked a changeover from an extensional to a contractional regime in response to initiation of continental collision with the subduction of stretched Arabian lithosphere. This early stage of collision produced topographic relief associated with shallow foreland basins, suggesting that shortening and tectonic loading occurred at low rates. Starting from the early Miocene (17.5 Ma), flexural subsidence in response to foreland basin initiation occurred. Fast sediment accumulation rates and erosional unroofing trends point to acceleration of shortening by the early Miocene. We suggest that the lag time between the initiation of continental collision (36 Ma) and the acceleration of regional deformation (20-17.5 Ma) reflects a two-stage collision process, involving the "soft" collision of stretched lithosphere at first and "hard" collision following the arrival of unstretched Arabian continental litho sphere in the subduction zone. Y1 - 2011 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1130/B30091.1 SN - 0016-7606 VL - 123 IS - 1-2 SP - 106 EP - 131 PB - American Institute of Physics CY - Boulder ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Guzman, S. A1 - Petrinovic, I. A. A1 - Brod, J. A. A1 - Hongn, Fernando D. A1 - Seggiaro, R. E. A1 - Montero, C. A1 - Carniel, Roberto A1 - Dantas, E. L. A1 - Sudo, Masafumi T1 - Petrology of the Luingo caldera (SE margin of the Puna plateau) a middle Miocene window of the arc-back arc configuration JF - Journal of volcanology and geothermal research N2 - We describe the petrographic characteristics, whole-rock geochemistry and mineral chemistry of rocks from the Pucarilla-Cerro Tipillas Volcanic Complex with emphasis on the rocks belonging to the middle Miocene Luingo caldera, located in the south-eastern portion of the Central Volcanic Zone (CVZ) of the Andes. We modelled the petrogenesis of the Luingo caldera rocks as a mixture of ca. 20% crustal magmas and 80% of mantle magmas by AFC with recharge processes. A comparison of Luingo geochemical data with the composition of Miocene-Pliocene volcanic rocks from the broad area, points to major thickening events during the middle Miocene for the western portion and during the upper Miocene for the eastern portion of the Southern CVZ. In the eastern sector (similar to 66 degrees W) the mantle source appears to change from a spinel-lherzolite type for the middle Miocene to a garnet-lherzolite type for the upper Miocene-Pliocene magmas. The areal distribution of the volcanic products led to the recognition of approximately equivalent areas covered by volcanic rocks both in the eastern and in the western Puna borders. This indicates a broad arc, which was structurally controlled at the proto-Puna/Puna margins, whose geochemical differences are related with variations in crustal thicknesses and heterogeneous mantle sources from west to east. KW - Luingo caldera KW - Central Andes KW - Miocene volcanism KW - Southern Central Volcanic Zone KW - crustal thickness Y1 - 2011 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jvolgeores.2010.12.008 SN - 0377-0273 VL - 200 IS - 3-4 SP - 171 EP - 191 PB - Elsevier CY - Amsterdam ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Sobel, Edward A1 - Schoenbohm, Lindsay M. A1 - Chen, Jie A1 - Thiede, Rasmus Christoph A1 - Stockli, Daniel F. A1 - Sudo, Masafumi A1 - Strecker, Manfred T1 - Late Miocene-Pliocene deceleration of dextral slip between Pamir and Tarim: Implications for Pamir orogenesis JF - EARTH AND PLANETARY SCIENCE LETTERS N2 - The timing of the late Cenozoic collision between the Pamir salient and the Tien Shan as well as changes in the relative motion between the Pamir and Tarim are poorly constrained. The northern margin of the Pamir salient indented northward by similar to 300 km during the late Cenozoic, accommodated by south-dipping intracontinental subduction along the Main Pamir Thrust (MPT) coupled to strike-slip faults on the eastern flank of the orogen and both strike-slip and thrust faults on the western margin. The Kashgar-Yecheng transfer system (KYTS) is the main dextral slip shear zone separating Tarim from the Eastern Pamir, with an estimated cumulative offset of similar to 280 km at an average late Cenozoic dextral slip rate of 11-15 mm/a (Cowgill, 2010). In order to better constrain the slip history of the KYTS, we collected thermochronologic samples along the eastward-flowing, deeply incised, antecedent Tashkorgan-Yarkand River, which crosses the fault system on the eastern flank of the orogen. We present 29 new biotite (40)Ar/(39)Ar ages, apatite and zircon (U-Th-Sm)/He ages, and apatite fission track (AFT) analysis, combined with published muscovite and biotite (40)Ar/(39)Ar and AFT data, to create a unique thermochronologic dataset in this poorly studied and remote region. We constrain the timing of four major N-trending faults: the latter three are strands of the KYTS. The westernmost, the Kuke fault, experienced significant dip-slip, west-side-up displacement between > 12 and 6 Ma. To the east, within the KYTS, our new thermochronologic data and geomorphic observations suggest that the Kumtag and Kusilaf dextral slip faults have been inactive since at least 3-5 Ma. Long-term incision rates across the Aertashi dextral slip fault, the easternmost strand of the KYTS, are compatible with slow horizontal slip rates of 1.7-5.3 mm/a over the past 3 to 5 Ma. In summary, these data show that the slip rate of the KYTS decreased substantially during the late Miocene or Pliocene. Furthermore, Miocene-present regional kinematic reconstructions suggest that this deceleration reflects the substantial increase of northward motion of Tarim rather than a significant decrease of the northward velocity of the Pamir. (C) 2011 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved. KW - thermochronology KW - neotectonics KW - Pamir KW - Tien Shan KW - strike-slip fault KW - intracontinental subduction Y1 - 2011 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.epsl.2011.02.012 SN - 0012-821X VL - 304 IS - 3-4 SP - 369 EP - 378 PB - ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV CY - AMSTERDAM ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Willner, Arne P. A1 - Gerdes, Axel A1 - Massonne, Hans-Joachim A1 - Schmidt, Alexander A1 - Sudo, Masafumi A1 - Thomson, Stuart N. A1 - Vujovich, Graciela T1 - The geodynamics of collision of a microplate (Chilenia) in Devonian times deduced by the pressure-temperature-time evolution within part of a collisional belt (Guarguaraz Complex, W-Argentina) JF - Contributions to mineralogy and petrology N2 - The Guarguaraz Complex in West Argentina formed during collision between the microplate Chilenia and South America. It is composed of neritic clastic metasediments with intercalations of metabasic and ultrabasic rocks of oceanic origin. Prograde garnet growth in metapelite and metabasite occurred between 1.2 GPa, 470 degrees C and 1.4 GPa, 530 degrees C, when the penetrative s(2)-foliation was formed. The average age of garnet crystallization of 390 +/- 2 Ma (2 sigma) was determined from three four-point Lu-Hf mineral isochrones from metapelite and metabasite samples and represents the time of collision. Peak pressure conditions are followed by a decompression path with slight heating at 0.5 GPa, 560 degrees C. Fluid release during decompression caused equilibration of mineral compositions at the rims and also aided Ar diffusion. An Ar-40/39 Ar plateau age of white mica at 353 +/- 1 Ma (1 sigma) indicates the time of cooling below 350-400 degrees C. These temperatures were attained at pressures of 0.2-0.3 GPa, indicative of an average exhumation rate of >= 1 mm/a for the period 390-353 Ma. Late hydrous influx at 0.1-0.3 GPa caused pervasive growth of sericite and chlorite and reset the Ar/Ar ages of earlier coarse-grained white mica. At 284-295 Ma, the entire basement cooled below 280 degrees C (fission track ages of zircon) after abundant post-collisional granitoid intrusion. The deeply buried epicontinental sedimentary rocks, the high peak pressure referring to a low metamorphic geotherm of 10-12 degrees C/km, and the decompression/heating path are characteristics of material buried and exhumed within a (micro) continent-continent collisional setting. KW - Albite-amphibolite facies KW - Geothermobarometry KW - Lu-Hf system KW - K-Ar system KW - Fission track (zircon) KW - Collision zone KW - Garnet KW - Potassic white mica Y1 - 2011 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1007/s00410-010-0598-8 SN - 0010-7999 VL - 162 IS - 2 SP - 303 EP - 327 PB - Springer CY - New York ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Willner, Arne P. A1 - Massonne, Hans-Joachim A1 - Ring, Uwe A1 - Sudo, Masafumi A1 - Thomson, Stuart N. T1 - P-T evolution and timing of a late Palaeozoic fore-arc system and its heterogeneous Mesozoic overprint in north-central Chile (latitudes 31-32 degrees S) JF - Geological magazine N2 - In the late Palaeozoic fore-arc system of north-central Chile at latitudes 31-32 degrees S (from the west to the east) three lithotectonic units are telescoped within a short distance by a Mesozoic strikeslip event (derived peak P-T conditions in brackets): (1) the basally accreted Choapa Metamorphic Complex (CMC; 350-430 degrees C, 6-9 kbar), (2) the frontally accreted Arrayan Formation (AF; 280-320 degrees C, 4-6 kbar) and (3) the retrowedge basin of the Huentelauquen Formation (HF; 280-320 degrees C, 3-4 kbar). In the CMC, Ar-Ar spot ages locally date white-mica formation at peak P-T conditions and during early exhumation at 279-242 Ma. In a local garnet mica-schist intercalation (570-585 degrees C, 11-13 kbar) Ar-Ar spot ages refer to the ascent from the subduction channel at 307-274 Ma. Portions of the CMC were isobarically heated to 510-580 degrees C at 6.6-8.5 kbar. The age of peak P-T conditions in the AF can only vaguely be approximated at >= 310 Ma by relict fission-track ages consistent with the observation that frontal accretion occurred prior to basal accretion. Zircon fission-track dating indicates cooling below similar to 280 degrees C at similar to 248 Ma in the CMC and the AF, when a regional unconformity also formed. Ar-Ar white-mica spot ages in parts of the CMC and within the entire AF and HF point to heterogeneous resetting during Mesozoic extensional and shortening events at similar to 245-240 Ma, similar to 210-200 Ma, similar to 174-159 Ma and similar to 142-127 Ma. The zircon fission-track ages are locally reset at 109-96 Ma. All resetting of Ar-Ar white-mica ages is proposed to have occurred by in situ dissolution/precipitation at low temperature in the presence of locally penetrating hydrous fluids. Hence syn-and postaccretionary events in the fore-arc system can still be distinguished and dated in spite of its complex heterogeneous postaccretional overprint. KW - Ar-Ar white-mica dating KW - zircon fission-track dating KW - accretionary prism KW - frontal accretion KW - basal accretion KW - thermal overprint KW - age resetting Y1 - 2012 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1017/S0016756811000641 SN - 0016-7568 VL - 149 IS - 2 SP - 177 EP - 207 PB - Cambridge Univ. Press CY - New York ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Ozsayin, Erman A1 - Ciner, T. Attila A1 - Rojay, F. Bora A1 - Dirik, R. Kadir A1 - Melnick, Daniel A1 - Fernandez-Blanco, David A1 - Bertotti, Giovanni A1 - Schildgen, Taylor F. A1 - Garcin, Yannick A1 - Strecker, Manfred A1 - Sudo, Masafumi T1 - Plio-Quaternary extensional tectonics of the Central Anatolian Plateau a case study from the Tuz Golu Basin, Turkey JF - Turkish journal of earth sciences = Türk yerbilimleri dergisi N2 - The Tuz Golu Basin is the largest sedimentary depression located at the center of the Central Anatolian Plateau, an extensive, low-relief region with elevations of ca. 1 km located between the Pontide and Tauride mountains. Presently, the basin morphology and sedimentation processes are mainly controlled by the extensional Tuz Golu Fault Zone in the east and the transtensional Inonu-Eskisehir Fault System in the west. The purpose of this study is to contribute to the understanding of the Plio-Quaternary deformation history and to refine the timing of the latest extensional phase of the Tuz Golu Basin. Field observations, kinematic analyses, interpretations of seismic reflection lines, and Ar-40/Ar-39 dating of a key ignimbrite layer suggest that a regional phase of NNW-SSE to NE-SW contraction ended by 6.81 +/- 0.24 Ma and was followed by N-S to NE-SW extension during the Pliocene-Quaternary periods. Based on sedimentological and chronostratigraphic markers, the average vertical displacement rates over the past 5 or 3 Ma with respect to the central part of Tuz Golu Lake are 0.03 to 0.05 mm/year for the fault system at the western flank of the basin and 0.08 to 0.13 mm/year at the eastern flank. Paleo-shorelines of the Tuz Golu Lake, vestiges of higher lake levels related to Quaternary climate change, are important strain markers and were formed during Last Glacial Maximum conditions as indicated by a radiocarbon age of 21.8 +/- 0.4 ka BP obtained from a stromatolitic crust. Geomorphic observations and deformed lacustrine shorelines suggest that the main strand of the Tuz Golu Fault Zone straddling the foothills of the Sereflikochisar-Aksaray range has not been active during the Holocene. Instead, deformation appears to have migrated towards the interior of the basin along an offshore fault that runs immediately west of Sereflikochisar Peninsula. This basinward migration of deformation is probably associated with various processes acting at the lithospheric scale, such as plateau uplift and/or microplate extrusion. KW - Central Anatolia KW - Tuz Golu Basin KW - orogenic plateau evolution KW - extensional tectonics KW - kinematic analysis KW - lake shoreline Y1 - 2013 U6 - https://doi.org/10.3906/yer-1210-5 SN - 1300-0985 VL - 22 IS - 5 SP - 691 EP - 714 PB - Tübitak CY - Ankara ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Beyene, Yonas A1 - Katoh, Shigehiro A1 - Wolde Gabriel, Giday A1 - Hart, William K. A1 - Uto, Kozo A1 - Sudo, Masafumi A1 - Kondo, Megumi A1 - Hyodo, Masayuki A1 - Renne, Paul R. A1 - Suwa, Gen A1 - Asfaw, Berhane T1 - The characteristics and chronology of the earliest. Acheulean at Konso, Ethiopia JF - Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America N2 - The Acheulean technological tradition, characterized by a large (>10 cm) flake-based component, represents a significant technological advance over the Oldowan. Although stone tool assemblages attributed to the Acheulean have been reported from as early as circa 1.6-1.75 Ma, the characteristics of these earliest occurrences and comparisons with later assemblages have not been reported in detail. Here, we provide a newly established chronometric calibration for the Acheulean assemblages of the Konso Formation, southern Ethiopia, which span the time period similar to 1.75 to <1.0 Ma. The earliest Konso Acheulean is chronologically indistinguishable from the assemblage recently published as the world's earliest with an age of similar to 1.75 Ma at Kokiselei, west of Lake Turkana, Kenya. This Konso assemblage is characterized by a combination of large picks and crude bifaces/unifaces made predominantly on large flake blanks. An increase in the number of flake scars was observed within the Konso Formation handaxe assemblages through time, but this was less so with picks. The Konso evidence suggests that both picks and handaxes were essential components of the Acheulean from its initial stages and that the two probably differed in function. The temporal refinement seen, especially in the handaxe forms at Konso, implies enhanced function through time, perhaps in processing carcasses with long and stable cutting edges. The documentation of the earliest Acheulean at similar to 1.75 Ma in both northern Kenya and southern Ethiopia suggests that behavioral novelties were being established in a regional scale at that time, paralleling the emergence of Homo erectus-like hominid morphology. KW - chronostratigraphy KW - Early Pleistocene KW - lithic technology development Y1 - 2013 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.1221285110 SN - 0027-8424 VL - 110 IS - 5 SP - 1584 EP - 1591 PB - National Acad. of Sciences CY - Washington ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Sobel, Edward A1 - Chen, Jie A1 - Schoenbohm, Lindsay M. A1 - Thiede, Rasmus Christoph A1 - Stockli, Daniel F. A1 - Sudo, Masafumi A1 - Strecker, Manfred T1 - Oceanic-style subduction controls late Cenozoic deformation of the Northern Pamir orogen JF - Earth & planetary science letters N2 - The northern part of the Pamir orogen is the preeminent example of an active intracontinental subduction zone in the early stages of continent-continent collision. Such zones are the least understood type of plate boundaries because modern examples are few and of limited access, and ancient analogs have been extensively overprinted by subsequent tectonic and erosion processes. In the Pamir, it has been assumed that most of the plate convergence was accommodated by overthrusting along the plate-bounding Main Pamir Thrust (MPT), which forms the principal northern mountain and deformation front of the Pamir. However, the synopsis of our new and previously published thermochronologic data from this region shows that the hanging wall of the MPT experienced relatively minor amounts of late Cenozoic exhumation. The Pamir orogen as a whole is an integral part of the overriding plate in a subduction system, while the remnant basin to the north constitutes the downgoing plate, with the bulk of the convergence accommodated by underthrusting. Herein, we demonstrate that the observed deformation of the upper and lower plates within the Pamir-Alai convergence zone resembles highly arcuate oceanic subduction systems characterized by slab rollback, subduction erosion, subduction accretion, and marginal slab-tear faults. We suggest that the curvature of the North Pamir is genetically linked to the short width and rollback of the south-dipping Alai slab; northward motion (indentation) of the Pamir is accommodated by crustal processes related to this rollback. The onset of south-dipping subduction is tentatively linked to intense Pamir contraction following break-off of the north-dipping Indian slab beneath the Karakoram. KW - subduction accretion KW - subduction erosion KW - exhumation KW - thermochronology KW - intracontinental deformation KW - Pamir Y1 - 2013 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.epsl.2012.12.009 SN - 0012-821X VL - 363 IS - 1 SP - 204 EP - 218 PB - Elsevier CY - Amsterdam ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Sirocko, Frank A1 - Dietrich, Stephan A1 - Veres, Daniel A1 - Grootes, Pieter M. A1 - Schaber-Mohr, Katja A1 - Seelos, Klemens A1 - Nadeau, Marie-Josee A1 - Kromer, Bernd A1 - Rothacker, Leo A1 - Roehner, Marieke A1 - Krbetschek, Matthias A1 - Appleby, Peter G. A1 - Hambach, Ulrich A1 - Rolf, Christian A1 - Sudo, Masafumi A1 - Grim, Stephanie T1 - Multi-proxy dating of Holocene maar lakes and Pleistocene dry maar sediments in the Eifel, Germany JF - Quaternary science reviews : the international multidisciplinary research and review journal N2 - During the last twelve years the ELSA Project (Eifel Laminated Sediment Archive) at Mainz University has drilled a total of about 52 cores from 27 maar lakes and filled-in maar basins in the Eifel/Germany. Dating has been completed for the Holocene cores using 6 different methods (Pb-210 and Cs-137 activities, palynostratigraphy, event markers, varve counting, C-14) In general, the different methods consistently complement one another within error margins. Event correlation was used for relating typical lithological changes with historically known events such as the two major Holocene flood events at 1342 AD and ca 800 BC. Dating of MIS2-MIS3 core sections is based on greyscale tuning, radiocarbon and OSL dating, magnetostratigraphy and tephrochronology. The lithological changes in the sediment cores demonstrate a sequence of events similar to the North Atlantic rapid climate variability of the Last Glacial Cycle. The warmest of the MIS3 interstadials was GI14, when a forest with abundant spruce covered the Eifel area from 55 to 48 ka BP, i.e. during a time when also other climate archives in Europe suggested very warm conditions. The forest of this "Early Stage 3 warm phase" developed subsequently into a steppe with scattered birch and pine, and finally into a glacial desert at around 25 ka BP. Evidence for Mono Lake and Laschamp geomagnetic excursions is found in two long cores. Several large eruptions during Middle and Late Pleistocene (Ulmener Maar - 11,000 varve years BP, Laacher See - 12,900 varve years BP, Mosenberg volcanoes/Meerfelder Maar 41-45 cal ka BP, Dumpel Maar 116 ka BP, Glees Maar - 151 ka BP) produced distinct ash-layers crucial for inter-core and inter-site correlations. The oldest investigated maar of the Eifel is Ar-40/Ar-39 dated to the time older than 520 ka BP. KW - Eifel maar KW - Laminated lake sediments KW - Tuning KW - Historical events KW - C-14-derived chronology KW - Varve counting KW - Luminescence dating KW - Palynostratigraphy KW - (CS)-C-137 and Pb-210 dating KW - Palaeomagnetism KW - Tephrostratigraphy KW - Argon-Argon dating KW - GIS Y1 - 2013 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.quascirev.2012.09.011 SN - 0277-3791 VL - 62 SP - 56 EP - 76 PB - Elsevier CY - Oxford ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Thiede, Rasmus Christoph A1 - Sobel, Edward A1 - Chen, Jie A1 - Schoenbohm, Lindsay M. A1 - Stockli, Daniel F. A1 - Sudo, Masafumi A1 - Strecker, Manfred T1 - Late Cenozoic extension and crustal doming in the India-Eurasia collision zone new thermochronologic constraints from the NE Chinese Pamir JF - Tectonics N2 - The northward motion of the Pamir indenter with respect to Eurasia has resulted in coeval thrusting, strike-slip faulting, and normal faulting. The eastern Pamir is currently deformed by east-west oriented extension, accompanied by uplift and exhumation of the Kongur Shan (7719m) and Muztagh Ata (7546m) gneiss domes. Both domes are an integral part of the footwall of the Kongur Shan extensional fault system (KES), a 250 km long, north-south oriented graben. Why active normal faulting within the Pamir is primarily localized along the KES and not distributed more widely throughout the orogen has remained unclear. In addition, relatively little is known about how deformation has evolved throughout the Cenozoic, despite refined estimates on present-day crustal deformation rates and microseismicity, which indicate where crustal deformation is presently being accommodated. To better constrain the spatiotemporal evolution of faulting along the KES, we present 39 new apatite fission track, zircon U-Th-Sm/He, and Ar-40/Ar-39 cooling ages from a series of footwall transects along the KES graben shoulder. Combining these data with present-day topographic relief, 1-D thermokinematic and exhumational modeling documents successive stages, rather than synchronous deformation and gneiss dome exhumation. While the exhumation of the Kongur Shan commenced during the late Miocene, extensional processes in the Muztagh Ata massif began earlier and have slowed down since the late Miocene. We present a new model of synorogenic extension suggesting that thermal and density effects associated with a lithospheric tear fault along the eastern margin of the subducting Alai slab localize extensional upper plate deformation along the KES and decouple crustal motion between the central/western Pamir and eastern Pamir/Tarim basin. KW - Pamir KW - gneiss domes KW - collision KW - extension KW - thermochronology KW - exhumation Y1 - 2013 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1002/tect.20050 SN - 0278-7407 VL - 32 IS - 3 SP - 763 EP - 779 PB - American Geophysical Union CY - Washington ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Pourteau, Amaury A1 - Sudo, Masafumi A1 - Candan, Osman A1 - Lanari, P. A1 - Vidal, O. A1 - Oberhänsli, Roland T1 - Neotethys closure history of Anatolia - insights from Ar-40-Ar-39 geochronology and P-T estimation in high-pressure metasedimentary rocks JF - Journal of metamorphic geology N2 - The multiple high-pressure (HP), low-temperature (LT) metamorphic units of Western and Central Anatolia offer a great opportunity to investigate the subduction-and continental accretion-related evolution of the eastern limb of the long-lived Aegean subduction system. Recent reports of the HP-LT index mineral Fe-Mg-carpholite in three metasedimentary units of the Gondwana-derived Anatolide-Tauride continental block (namely the Afyon Zone, the Oren Unit and the southern Menderes Massif) suggest a more complicated scenario than the single-continental accretion model generally put forward in previous studies. This study presents the first isotopic dates (white mica Ar-40-Ar-39 geochronology), and where possible are combined with P-T estimates (chlorite thermometry, phengite barometry, multi-equilibrium thermobarometry), on carpholite-bearing rocks from these three HP-LT metasedimentary units. It is shown that, in the Afyon Zone, carpholite-bearing assemblages were retrogressed through greenschist-facies conditions at c. 67-62 Ma. Early retrograde stages in the Oren Unit are dated to 63-59 Ma. In the Kurudere-Nebiler Unit (HP Mesozoic cover of the southern Menderes Massif), HP retrograde stages are dated to c. 45 Ma, and post-collisional cooling to c. 26 Ma. These new results support that the Oren Unit represents the westernmost continuation of the Afyon Zone, whereas the Kurudere-Nebiler Unit correlates with the Cycladic Blueschist Unit of the Aegean Domain. In Western Anatolia, three successive HP-LT metamorphic belts thus formed: the northernmost Tavsanli Zone (c. 88-82 Ma), the Oren-Afyon Zone (between 70 and 65 Ma), and the Kurudere-Nebiler Unit (c. 52-45 Ma). The southward younging trend of the HP-LT metamorphism from the upper and internal to the deeper and more external structural units, as in the Aegean Domain, points to the persistence of subduction in Western Anatolia between 93-90 and c. 35 Ma. After the accretion of the Menderes-Tauride terrane, in Eocene times, subduction stopped, leading to continental collision and associated Barrovian-type metamorphism. Because, by contrast, the Aegean subduction did remain active due to slab roll-back and trench migration, the eastern limb (below Southwestern Anatolia) of the Hellenic slab was dramatically curved and consequently teared. It therefore is suggested that the possibility for subduction to continue after the accretion of buoyant (e.g. continental) terranes probably depends much on palaeogeography. KW - Ar-40-Ar-39 geochronology KW - Anatolia KW - chlorite-phengite thermobarometry KW - high-pressure metasedimentary rocks Y1 - 2013 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1111/jmg.12034 SN - 0263-4929 SN - 1525-1314 VL - 31 IS - 6 SP - 585 EP - 606 PB - Wiley-Blackwell CY - Hoboken ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Ogasawara, Masatsugu A1 - Fukuyama, Mayuko A1 - Horie, Kenji A1 - Sumii, Tomoaki A1 - Takehara, Mami A1 - Sudo, Masafumi T1 - SHRIMP U-Pb age of SoriZ93 zircon from the Sori Granodiorite, Northeast Japan: a potential reference zircon of Late Cretaceous age JF - ISLAND ARC N2 - SoriZ93 zircon was separated from residual mineral fraction after the preparation of the SORI93 biotite standard from the Sori Granodiorite in the Ashio Mountains, Northeast Japan, and analyzed for its U-Pb age using a sensitive high resolution ion microprobe (SHRIMP). The zircon grains of SoriZ93 are prismatic with pyramidal ends or broken prismatic fragments. Most zircons are 100-250m long and 50-150m wide. The zircons are clear crystals and colorless to pale yellow, although some grains are brown with optically low transparency. Cathodoluminescence (CL) imaging of the SoriZ93 zircons showed a fine oscillatory zoning, which is a typical characteristic of zircons in granitic rocks. A xenocrystic core was not present in the zircons. Although some mineral inclusions were present in the zircons, it is possible to select a typical analytical area with a dimension of 30m necessary for the microbeam technique. The analytical results of the colorless zircons provided a weighted mean Pb-207 corrected Pb-206/U-238 age of 93.9 +/- 0.6Ma (95% confidence, MSWD=0.97). This Pb-206/U-238 age is 1.3m.y. older than the K-Ar age of the SORI93 biotite, indicating that the granodiorite cooled to a closure temperature of the K-Ar biotite system within a short time interval. Although some grains of the SoriZ93 zircons show high U concentration, a selection of colorless zircons provided the precise age to be used for the calibration and reference for zircons of the Late Cretaceous. KW - Late Cretaceous KW - SHRIMP U-Pb dating KW - Sori Granodiorite KW - SoriZ93 KW - zircon standard Y1 - 2013 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1111/iar.12041 SN - 1038-4871 VL - 22 IS - 3 SP - 306 EP - 317 PB - WILEY-BLACKWELL CY - HOBOKEN ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Van der Meer, Q. H. A. A1 - Scott, James M. A1 - Waight, T. E. A1 - Sudo, Masafumi A1 - Schersten, A. A1 - Cooper, Alan F. A1 - Spell, Terry L. T1 - Magmatism during Gondwana break-up: new geochronological data from Westland, New Zealand JF - New Zealand journal of geology and geophysics : an international journal of pacific rim geosciences N2 - Newly determined Late Cretaceous Ar-40/Ar-39 ages on megacrystic kaersutite from four lamprophyre dikes, and a U-Pb zircon age on a trachyte, from central and north Westland (New Zealand) are presented. These ages suggest that the intrusion of mafic dikes (88-86 and 69 Ma) was not necessarily restricted to the previously established narrow age range of 80-92 Ma. The younger lamprophyre and trachyte dikes (c. 68-70 Ma) imply that tensional stresses in the Western Province were either renewed at this time, or that extension and related magmatism continued during opening of the Tasman Sea. Extension-related magmatism in the region not only preceded Tasman seafloor spreading initiation (starting at c. 83 Ma, lasting to c. 53 Ma), but may have sporadically continued for up to 15 Ma after continental break-up. KW - Gondwana break-up KW - geochronology KW - lamprophyre KW - central Westland KW - Fraser Complex Y1 - 2013 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1080/00288306.2013.826699 SN - 0028-8306 SN - 1175-8791 VL - 56 IS - 4 SP - 229 EP - 242 PB - Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group CY - Abingdon ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Wiederkehr, Michael A1 - Sudo, Masafumi A1 - Bousquet, Romain A1 - Berger, Alfons A1 - Schmid, Stefan M. T1 - Alpine orogenic evolution from subduction to collisional thermal overprint : the Ar-40/Ar-39 age constraints from the Valaisan Ocean, central Alps N2 - The investigated HP/LT metasedimentary units of the Valaisan and adjacent European domains occupy a key position in the Alpine belt for understanding the transition from early subduction-related HP/LT metamorphism to collision-related Barrovian overprint and the evolution of mountain belts in general. The timing of high-pressure metamorphism, subsequent retrogression and following Barrow-type overprint was studied by Ar-40/Ar-39 dating of biotite and several white mica generations that are well characterized in terms of mineral chemistry, texture and associated mineral assemblages. Four distinct age populations of white mica record peak pressure conditions (42-40 Ma) and several stages of subsequent retrograde metamorphic evolution (36-25 Ma). Biotite isotopic analyses yield consistent apparent ages that cluster around 18-16 Ma for the Barrow-type thermal overprint. The recorded isotopic data reveal a significant time gap in the order of some 20 Ma between subduction-related HP/LT metamorphism and collision-related Barrovian overprint, supporting the notion of a polymetamorphic evolution associated with a bimodal P-T path. Y1 - 2009 UR - http://www.agu.org/journals/tc/ U6 - https://doi.org/10.1029/2009tc002496 SN - 0278-7407 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Willner, Arne P. A1 - Sepúlveda, Fernando A. A1 - Hervé, Francisco A1 - Massonne, Hans-Joachim A1 - Sudo, Masafumi T1 - Conditions and timing of pumpellyite-actinolite-facies metamorphism in the early Mesozoic frontal accretionary prism of the Madre de Dios Archipelago (latitude 50 degrees 20'S; Southern Chile) N2 - The Madre de Dios Metamorphic Complex (MDMC) in southern Chile is a fossil frontal accretionary prism, which is mainly composed of metapsammopelitic rocks, intercalations of oceanic rocks (greenstone and metachert) and platform carbonate. We concentrated on the metabasite to decipher the metamorphic evolution. This rock type contains assemblages of the pumpellyite-actinolite facies: pumpellyite +/- actinolite-chlorite +/- grandite +/- phengite +/- epidote-albite- quartz-titanite +/- K-feldspar +/- calcite. The metamorphic phases mainly grew by prograde hydration reactions during various episodes of restricted fluid influx. Fundamental phase relations of the pumpellyite-actinolite facies and adjacent facies were reproduced by pseudosections calculated for the system K2O-Na2O-CaO-FeO-O-2-MgO-Al2O3-TiO2-SiO2-H2O- CO2 at 200-400 degrees C and 1-9 kbar. The calculated stability fields of the metamorphic assemblages as realized in the MDMC metabasite indicate highest metamorphic conditions restricted to 290-310 degrees C, 4-6 kbar for the MDMC, presumably as a result of the main fluid influx at these conditions. Nevertheless, earlier local equilibria are still preserved as a result of strongly kinetically controlled mineral reactions and a lack of recrystallization and compositional homogenization at thin-section scale. Hence, thermodynamic calculations of local multivariant mineral equilibria using the entire compositional variation of minerals in the MDMC show that the prograde PT path evolved from 4 +/- 1 kbar, 200-220 degrees C to 5 +/- 1 kbar, 290-330 degrees C. The prograde PT path reflects nearly horizontal particle paths after reaching the maximum depth typical for frontal accretionary prisms. Long residence at maximum depth resulted in thermal re-equilibration. Ar-40/Ar-39 spot ages were measured by in situ UV laser ablation of local phengite concentrations in a deformed metapelite at 233 center dot 2 +/- 1 center dot 8 Ma and in an undeformed metabasite at 200 center dot 8 +/- 2 center dot 4 Ma. Whereas the first age represents an age of accretion, the latter age can be attributed to mineral growth either during a younger stage of accretion or during a retrograde stage. Ar-40/Ar-39 isotopic analyses of two further metabasite samples reflect a prominent resetting of ages at 152 center dot 0 +/- 2 center dot 2 Ma and white mica growth during external fluid access triggered by either a local intrusion or a late Jurassic extensional episode. Y1 - 2009 UR - http://petrology.oxfordjournals.org/ U6 - https://doi.org/10.1093/petrology/egp071 SN - 0022-3530 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Carrapa, Barbara A1 - DeCelles, Peter G. A1 - Reiners, Peter W. A1 - Gehrels, George E. A1 - Sudo, Masafumi T1 - Apatite triple dating and white mica Ar-40/Ar-39 thermochronology of syntectonic detritus in the Central Andes : a multiphase tectonothermal history N2 - We applied apatite U-Pb, fission track, and (U-Th)/He triple dating and white mica Ar-40/Ar-39 thermochronology to syntectonic sedimentary rocks from the central Andean Puna plateau in order to determine the source-area geochronology and source sedimentary basin thermal histories, and ultimately the timing of multiple tectonothermal events in the Central Andes. Apatite triple dating of samples from the Eocene Geste Formation in the Salar de Pastos Grandes basin shows late Precambrian-Devonian apatite U-Pb crystallization ages, Eocene apatite fission track (AFT), and Eocene-Miocene (U-Th)/He (ca. 8-47 Ma) cooling ages. Double dating of cobbles from equivalent strata in the Arizaro basin documents early Eocene (46.2 +/- 3.9 Ma) and Cretaceous (107.6 +/- 7.6, 109.5 +/- 7.7 Ma) AFT and Eocene-Oligocene (ca. 55-30 Ma) (U-Th)/He ages. Thermal modeling suggests relatively rapid cooling between ca. 80 and 50 Ma and reheating and subsequent diachronous basin exhumation between ca. 30 Ma and 5 Ma. The Ar-40/Ar-39 white mica ages from the same samples in the Salar de Pastos Grandes area are mainly 400-350 Ma, younger than apatite U-Pb ages, suggesting source- terrane cooling and exhumation during the Devonian-early Carboniferous. Together these data reveal multiple phases of mountain building in the Paleozoic and Cenozoic. Basin burial temperatures within the plateau were limited to <80 degrees C and incision occurred diachronously during the Cenozoic. Y1 - 2009 UR - http://geology.gsapubs.org/ U6 - https://doi.org/10.1130/G25698a.1 SN - 0091-7613 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Bachmann, Raik A1 - Oncken, Onno A1 - Glodny, Johannes A1 - Seifert, Wolfgang A1 - Georgieva, Viktoria A1 - Sudo, Masafumi T1 - Exposed plate interface in the European Alps reveals fabric styles and gradients related to an ancient seismogenic coupling zone N2 - We present observations from a continuous exposure of an ancient plate interface in the depth range of its former seismogenic zone in the central Alps of Europe related to Late Cretaceous-early Tertiary subduction and accretion of the South Penninic lower plate underneath the Adriatic upper plate. The material forming the exposed plate interface zone has experienced flow and fracturing over an extended period of time followed by syncollisional exhumation, thus reflecting a multistage evolution. Fabric formation and metamorphism, however, chiefly record the deformation conditions of the precollisional setting along the plate interface. We identify an unstable slip domain from pseudotachylytes occurring in the temperature range between 200 and 300 degrees C. This zone coincides with a domain of intense veining in the subduction melange with mineral growth into open cavities, indicating fast, possibly seismic, rupture. Evidence for transient near-lithostatic fluid pressure as well as brittle fractures competing with mylonitic shear zones continues into the region below the occurrence of pseudotachylytes, possibly reflecting a zone of conditionally stable slip. The zone above the unstable slip area is devoid of veins but displays ample evidence of fluid-assisted processes similar to the deeper zone: solution-precipitation creep and dehydration reactions in the melange matrix, hydration, and sealing of the base of the upper plate. Seismic rupture here is possibly expressed by ubiquitous localized deformation zones. We hypothesize that trenchward sealing of parts of the plate interface as well as reaction-enhanced destruction of upper plate permeability is an important component, localizing the unstable slip zone. This relation may result from the competition of the pervasive, presumably interseismic, pressure solution creep destroying permeability and building elevated fluid pressure until the strength threshold is reached with seismic failure. Y1 - 2009 UR - http://www.agu.org/journals/jb/ U6 - https://doi.org/10.1029/2008jb005927 SN - 0148-0227 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Vasquez, Mónica A1 - Altenberger, Uwe A1 - Romer, Rolf L. A1 - Sudo, Masafumi A1 - Moreno-Murillo, Juan Manuel T1 - Magmatic evolution of the Andean Eastern Cordillera of Colombia during the Cretaceous : Influence of previous tectonic processes N2 - The Eastern Cordillera of the Colombian Andes represents an inverted Cretaceous basin where Cretaceous magmatism is characterized by rare mafic dykes and sills. We use Ar-40/Ar-39, Sr-Nd-Pb isotopes, as well as major and trace elements analyses of Cretaceous intrusions from both flanks of the Eastern Cordillera in combination with structural data to document the complex evolution of the basin. Magmatism, which is diachronous and geochemically diverse, seems to be related to mantle melting beneath the most subsiding segments of each sub-basin during enhanced extensional tectonics. The mafic intrusions display two different compositional series: an alkaline one with OIB-like pattern and a tholeiitic one with MORB-like features. This indicates at least two diverse mantle sources. Trace-element patterns suggest that the intrusions were emplaced in an extensional setting. Ar-40/Ar-39 dating on primary plagioclase and hornblende provides plateau ages between similar to 136 and similar to 74 Ma. The geochemical and temporal diversities show that the emplacement of the magmas was tectonically controlled, each sub-basin reflecting an individual subsidence event. Y1 - 2010 UR - http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/journal/08959811 U6 - https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jsames.2009.02.003 SN - 0895-9811 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Wilke, Franziska Daniela Helena A1 - O'Brien, Patrick J. A1 - Gerdes, Axel A1 - Timmerman, Martin Jan A1 - Sudo, Masafumi A1 - Khan, M. Ahmed T1 - The multistage exhumation history of the Kaghan Valley UHP series, NW Himalaya, Pakistan from U-Pb and Ar-40/Ar- 39 ages N2 - Amphibole and mica Ar-40/Ar-39 ages as well as zircon, rutile and titanite U-Pb geochronology of eclogites and associated host rocks from the Higher Himalayan Crystalline Nappes (Indian Plate) in the Upper Kaghan Valley, Pakistan allow distinction of a multistage exhumation history. An Eocene age for peak-pressure metamorphism has been obtained by phengite Ar-40/Ar-39 (47.3 +/- 0.3 Ma) and zircon U-Pb (47.3 +/- 0.4 and 47.4 +/- 0.3 Ma) ages from cover and basement gneisses. A very short-lived metamorphic peak and rapid cooling is documented by an amphibole Ar-40/Ar-39 age of 46.6 +/- 0.5 Ma and a rutile U-Pb age of 44.1 +/- 1.3 Ma from eclogites. Phengite and biotite ages from cover and basement sequences metamorphosed during the Himalayan orogeny are 34.5 +/- 0.2 to 28.1 +/- 0.2 Ma whereas youngest biotites, yielding 23.6 +/- 0.1 and 21.7 +/- 0.2 Ma, probably reflect argon partial resetting. The amphibole age, together with those derived from phengite and zircon demonstrate a rate of initial exhumation of 86-143 mm/a i.e. an extremely rapid transport of the Indian Plate continental crust from ultra-high pressure (UHP) conditions back to crustal levels (47-46 Ma for transport from 140 to 40 km depth). Subsequent exhumation (46-41 Ma, 40-35 km) slowed to about 1 mm/a at the base of the continental crust but increased again later towards slightly higher exhumation rates of ca. 2 mm/a (41-34 Ma, 35- 20 km). This indicates a change from buoyancy-driven exhumation at mantle depths to compression forces related to continent-continent collision and accompanied crustal folding, thrusting and stacking that finally exposed the former deeply-buried rocks. Y1 - 2010 UR - http://eurjmin.geoscienceworld.org/ U6 - https://doi.org/10.1127/0935-1221/2010/0022-2051 SN - 0935-1221 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Ozawa, Ayako A1 - Tagami, T. A1 - Sudo, Masafumi T1 - K-Ar geochronology of the temporal change of eruptive style in the eastern Izu peninsula, central Japan N2 - A recent K-Ar study elucidated that eruptive style in the eastern Izu peninsula changed from polygenetic to monogenetic volcano at 0.3-0.2 Ma. To narrow down the time of change, we determined 10 K-Ar ages on Togasayama Andesite of Amagi volcano, the youngest polygenetic volcano in the area, and Togasayama Monogenetic Volcano, one of the oldest monogenetic volcanoes in the area, which overlies a part of the Togasayama Andesite. Dating results showed that the Togasayama Andesite effused at least from 0.34 to 0.20 Ma, whereas the Togasayama Monogenetic Volcano erupted at 0.26- 0.29 Ma, suggesting that the northern part of the Togasayama Andesite effused after the eruption of the Togasayama Monogenetic Volcano. Considering previous data, it is therefore inferred that change of eruptive style in the eastern Izu area occurred during the period 0.29-0.20 Ma, with considerable overlap of both polygenetic and monogenetic volcanism Y1 - 2004 SN - 1038-4871 ER - TY - JOUR A1 - Ozawa, Ayako A1 - Tagami, Takahiro A1 - Listanco, Eddie L. A1 - Arpa, Carmencita B. A1 - Sudo, Masafumi T1 - Initiation and propagation of subduction along the Philippine Trench : evidence from the temporal and spatial distribution of volcanoes N2 - K-Ar ages of 37 samples collected from the Bicol peninsula, the Luzon island, Philippines, were determined by the unspiked sensitivity method in order to constrain the timing of initiation of subduction along the Philippine Trench. The measured K-Ar ages range from 0 to 7 Ma with two old outliers of 27 and 43 Ma. Together with K-Ar ages previously reported on volcanics in Leyte and eastern Mindanao, subduction volcanism has likely propagated from north to south: similar to 6.6 Ma in Bicol and similar to 3.5 Ma in Leyte and its vicinity. The temporal and spatial distribution suggests that the subduction volcanism started earlier in the north than in the south. This is consistent with the southern propagation of subduction along the Philippine Trench from similar to 8 Ma. (C) 2003 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved Y1 - 2004 SN - 1367-9120 ER -