Abstract

Carolinia comprises a collection of Neoproterozoic–Early Paleozoic magmatic arc and sedimentary terranes that were amalgamated and accreted to Laurentia in the early to middle Paleozoic. In central North Carolina, mafic rocks of the Stony Mountain gabbro intrude sub-aqueous volcanic and sedimentary rocks and submarine epiclastic sedimentary rocks of the Albemarle Group. The age of the Stony Mountain gabbro is constrained to the Early Cambrian–Middle Ordovician. Field relations indicate that the gabbro represents the final phase of magmatism following the eruption and deposition of the Neoproterozoic–earliest Cambrian Albemarle Group, yet the gabbro pre-dates regional metamorphism and tectonism related to the Late Ordovician accretion of Carolinia to Laurentia. The Stony Mountain gabbro has a sub-alkaline basaltic composition, variable TiO 2, MgO and Ni/Cr values. The rocks have a geochemical signature typical of island-arcs; the degree of LREE enrichment, prominent negative Nb anomalies and Nb/Th ratios are all features of low-K to medium-K tholeiitic basalts in modern island-arc, subduction-related lavas. Isotope data are dominated by juvenile compositions that are consistent with derivation from lithospheric and asthenospheric sources during decompression melting of the mantle. The Stony Mountain gabbro records subduction zone magmatism in a rifted island arc setting and can be modeled as the product of ~ 10–15% hydrous partial melting of variable mixtures of MORB- and OIB-like mantle sources overprinted by a minor subducted-slab derived hydrous fluid component. By analogy with modern settings the rocks of the Stony Mountain gabbro are comparable to MORB-like to OIB-type enriched rocks from the Lau Island and Sumisu Rift and are interpreted to have formed within an evolving Early Paleozoic island arc–back arc rift–basin system. The presence of an Early Cambrian arc–back arc rift system in Carolinia is broadly coeval with arc–back arc volcanism in other peri-Gondwanan blocks of the Appalachians and may be related to the Early Paleozoic opening of the Rheic Ocean.

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