Abstract
ABSTRACT Volcaniclastic and coherent volcanic rocks of the Permian island arc Brook Street Terrane crop out along the Southland coast, New Zealand, near Riverton. Extensive along-strike exposures reveal lateral variations in these submarine deposits and provide a rare opportunity to examine deposits of an arc environment within a thin slice of time. We describe pillow lavas, dikes, hydroclastic breccias, tuffs, lapilli tuffs and argillites, all hydrothermally altered and metamorphosed to prehnite-pumpellyite facies. Trace element geochemical data indicate multiple primitive island arc to MORB-like magma sources. Two separate volcanic centres apparently tapped different mantle domains in a source region transitional between the arc and back-arc. The centres’ proximity and inferred small sizes suggest they were satellite vents of a larger arc volcano. Tuff and lapilli tuff were formed as hyaloclastite during eruption of pillow lava, and redeposited by subaqueous mass flows. Peperitic contacts indicate that the lavas intruded unconsolidated volcaniclastic deposits. We infer that hydroclastic fragmentation associated with pillow emplacement produced debris that was then intruded by later pillows, with local peperite formation, as eruption persisted. The hydroclastic debris from these satellite vents was resedimented in turbidite fans with channels, and periodic turbidity currents delivered fine-grained material from the volcano’s main vent.
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