Friday, 31 August 2007 - 2:30 PM
5.P1.B-4

New Rb-Sr mineral ages temporally link plume events with accretion at the margin of Gondwana

Michael J. Flowerdew1, J. Stephen Daly2, and Teal R. Riley1. (1) Geological Sciences Divsion, British Antarctic Survey, High Cross, Madingley Road, Cambridge, CB3 0ET, United Kingdom, (2) University College Dublin, School of Geological Sciences, Belfield, Dublin 4, Ireland

Five of six Rb-Sr muscovite mineral isochron ages, from the Scotia Metamorphic Complex of the South Orkney Islands, West Antarctica, average 190 ± 4 Ma. The muscovite ages are interpreted to date foliation-formation and thus also accretion and subduction at the Gondwana margin. Co-incident picrite and ferropicrite magmatism, indicative of melts from deep-seated depleted mantle, permits a causative link between accretion and the arrival of the Karoo – Ferrar – Chon Aike mantle plume in the Early Jurassic. Three biotite Rb-Sr mineral isochron ages are consistently younger and average 176 ± 5 Ma. The biotite ages may record post-metamorphic cooling or more likely retrogressive metamorphic effects during uplift.

[Manuscript]