Abstract

The Circum-Superior Large Igneous Province (LIP) consists predominantly of ultramafic-mafic lavas and sills with minor felsic components, distributed as various segments along the margins of the Superior Province craton. Ultramafic-mafic dykes and carbonatite complexes of the LIP also intrude the more central parts of the craton. Most of this magmatism occurred ∼1880Ma. Previously a wide range of models have been proposed for the different segments of the CSLIP with the upper mantle as the source of magmatism.New major and trace element and Nd-Hf isotopic data reveal that the segments of the CSLIP can be treated as a single entity formed in a single tectonomagmatic environment. In contrast to most previous studies that have proposed a variety of geodynamic settings, the CSLIP is interpreted to have formed from a single mantle plume. Such an origin is consistent with the high MgO and Ni contents of the magmatic rocks, trace element signatures that similar to oceanic-plateaus and ocean island basalts and εNd-εHf isotopic signatures which are each more negative than those of the estimated depleted upper mantle at ∼1880Ma. Further support for a mantle plume origin comes from calculated high degrees of partial melting, mantle potential temperatures significantly greater than estimated ambient Proterozoic mantle and the presence of a radiating dyke swarm. The location of most of the magmatic rocks along the Superior Province margins probably represents the deflection of plume material by the thick cratonic keel towards regions of thinner lithosphere at the craton margins. The primary magmas, generated by melting of the heterogeneous plume head, fractionated in magma chambers within the crust, and assimilated varying amounts of crustal material in the process.

Highlights

  • MELTS_Excel (Gualda and Ghiorso, 2015) has been used to model the petrogenetic evolution of the Chukotat Group, which is an ideal model system for assessing these processes across the entire CSLIP, as it is made up of three compositionally disparate groups which span the range of trace element signatures found throughout the CSLIP

  • The earliest preserved magmatic activity of the CSLIP may be represented by carbonatitic magmatism along the Kapuskasing Structural Zone which has an age range of 1897–1907 Ma

  • Most of the ultramafic-mafic magmatism of the Large Igneous Provinces (LIPs) occurred between 1885 Ma and 1870 Ma (Fig. 2)

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Summary

Introduction

Large Igneous Provinces (LIPs) represent large volume (>0.1 Mkm; frequently above >1 Mkm3), mainly mafic (-ultramafic) magmatic events of intraplate affinity, that occur in both continental and oceanic settings, and are typically of short duration (

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