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Initial Cenozoic magmatic activity in East Africa: new geochemical constraints on magma distribution within the Eocene continental flood basalt province

Authors :
Rayn K. Phillips
Cynthia Ebinger
Tyrone O. Rooney
Nick Rogers
Guillaume Girard
Liam D. Peterson
R. Alex Steiner
Source :
Geological Society, London, Special Publications. 518:435-465
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Geological Society of London, 2021.

Abstract

The initial interaction between material rising from the African Large Low Shear Velocity Province and the African lithosphere manifests as the Eocene continental large igneous province (LIP), centered on southern Ethiopia and northern Kenya. Here we present a geographically well-distributed geochemical dataset comprising the flood basalt lavas of the Eocene continental LIP to refine the regional volcano-stratigraphy into three distinct magmatic units: (1) the highly-alkaline small-volume Akobo Basalts (49.4–46.6 Ma), representing the initial phase of flood basalt volcanism derived from the melting of lithospheric-mantle metasomes, (2) the primitive and spatially restricted Amaro Basalts (45.2–39.58 Ma) representing the early main phase of flood basalt volcanism derived from the melting of the upwelling thermochemical anomaly, and (3) the spatially extensive Gamo-Makonnen magmatic unit (38-28 Ma) representing the mature main phase of flood basalt volcanism that has undergone significant processing within the lithosphere resulting in relatively homogeneous compositions. The focused intrusion of these main phase magmas over 10 m.y. preconditioned the African lithosphere for the localization of strain during subsequent episodes of lithospheric stretching. The focusing of strain into the region occupied by this continental LIP may have contributed to the initial extension in SW Ethiopia associated with the East African Rift.Supplementary material at https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.c.5557626

Details

ISSN :
20414927 and 03058719
Volume :
518
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Geological Society, London, Special Publications
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....b83ccc1c491b5dfaf449e666829ef446
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1144/sp518-2020-262