Abstract
Lamprophyres and phonolite intrusions were sampled in the so-called Pre-Salt sequence of well 1-BRSA-905-RJS in northern Santos Basin nearby the Cabo Frio Structural High in SE Brazil. These alkaline rocks indicate the existence of a strongly silica-undersaturated trend. However, fractional crystallization modeling as well as Sr-Nd-Pb-Hf isotope data shows that the alkaline lamprophyres are not suitable parental compositions to the evolved felsic phonolitic magmas. The Sr-Nd-Pb-Hf isotope compositions of the lamprophyric magmas represent mixing of EM1 and Trindade plume mantle components. The EM1 is possibly related with the melt- and/or fluid-induced metasomatic processes on the subcontinental lithospheric mantle (SCLM) that occurred beneath the South American Platform during the Neo-Proterozoic-Cambrian subduction processes associated with the final stages of the Gondwana amalgamation, as recorded by the TDM ages (601-499 Ma) of the studied intrusions in Santos. 40Ar/39Ar analysis presented integrated age of 41.06±0.02Ma and 38.62±0.02Ma for phonolite and lamprophyre samples, respectively. A “plateau” age assignment for the true crystallization age of the sample could not be obtained due to the discordance in the ages of individual steps. This discordance was attributed to loss of radiogenic 40Ar that can happen in nature due to reheating events or metasomatism. An interaction between the Trindade plume head and SCLM is proposed for the geodynamics of Santos Basin at 40 Ma. The presence of an anomalously hot mantle represented by the deflected Trindade plume head beneath Santos at the Eocene is supported by the petrological and geochronological data. Therefore, it may be relevant to consider high geothemal flow regimes in basin evolution models proposed for Santos during the Eocene.
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