Abstract

Dredgings conducted during the French–Indonesian cruises Banda Sea II and III collected volcanic rocks from several ridges of the Banda Sea area (Tukang Besi ridge, site 218; Lucipara ridge, sites 214 and 305; Nieuwerkerk–Emperor of China, sites 219 and 220). With the exception of one 46-Ma-old N-MORB type basalt, thought to belong to an ophiolitic complex, K–Ar and Ar–Ar datings indicate that all the dredged volcanics are Neogene. They range in age from ca. 10 Ma (Tukang Besi back-arc basalts) to 8–7 Ma (Nieuwerkerk–Emperor of China calc-alkaline andesites) and to 7–3 Ma (Lucipara OIB-type transitional basalts and cordierite-bearing andesites). Radiogenic isotopic signatures of andesites are consistent with an AFC (Assimilation coupled with Fractional Crystallization) process involving assimilation of continental crust. 8–3-Ma-old calc-alkaline volcanic activity is also recorded on the Wetar segment, an inactive part of the East Sunda arc, and corresponding isotopic compositions are also consistent with an AFC process involving continental crust. These features suggest that Lucipara–Nieuwerkerk–Emperor of China ridges and the Wetar segment were representing a single volcanic arc 8–7 Ma ago. The corresponding calc-alkaline activity was related to the subduction of the Indian oceanic lithosphere beneath continental blocks of Australian origin. Back-arc opening processes occurred from 6 to 3 Ma as a multi-rift opening for the Wetar basin and as a single-rift opening for the Damar basin while subduction-related magmatism was still active in the Wetar segment. Volcanic activity stopped at 7 Ma in the Nieuwerkerk–Emperor of China ridge. On Lucipara ridge, 6–3 Ma volcanic activity emplaced concomitantly transitional basalts and cordierite-bearing andesites. The mineralogical and chemical features of the latter are consistent with an AFC process involving assimilation of continental crust by mantle-derived basaltic magmas. The end of magmatic activity on both volcanic segments at 3 Ma is thought to result from the collision of Timor with the Wetar segment of the Sunda arc.

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