The Rajahmundry Trap Basalts (RTB) are erupted through fault-controlled fissures in the Krishna-Godavari Basin (K-G Basin) of Godavari Triple Junction, occurring as a unique outcrop sandwiched between Cretaceous a...The Rajahmundry Trap Basalts (RTB) are erupted through fault-controlled fissures in the Krishna-Godavari Basin (K-G Basin) of Godavari Triple Junction, occurring as a unique outcrop sandwiched between Cretaceous and Tertiary sediments along the east coast of India. Detailed geochemical studies have revealed that RTB are mid-Ti (1.74-1.92) to high-Ti (2.04-2.81) basalts with a distinct quartz tholeiitic parentage. MgO (6.2-13.12 wt.%), Mg# (29-50) and Zr (109-202 ppm) suggest that these basalts evolved by fractional crystallization during the ascent of the parent magma along deep-seated fractures. Mod- erate to high fractionation of HREE, as indicated by (Gd/Yb)N ratios (1.71-2.31) of RTB, suggest their generation through 3-5% melting of a Fe-rich mantle corresponding to the stability fields of spinel and garnet peridotite at depths of 60-100 km. Low K2O/P2O5 (0.26-1.26), high TiO2/P2O5 (6.74-16.79), La/Nb (0.89-1.45), Nb/Th 〉 8 (8.35-13), negative anomalies at Rb reflect minimum contamination by granitic continental crust. (Nb/La)PM ratios (0.66-1.1) of RTB are attributed to endogenic contamination resulted through recycling of subducted oceanic slab into the mantle. Pronounced Ba enrichment with relative depletion in Rb indicates assimilation of Infra- and Inter-trappean sediments of estuarine to shallow marine character. Geochemical compositions such as A1203/TiO2 (3.88-6.83), medium to high TiO2 (1.74 -2.81 wt.%), positive Nb anomalies and LREE enrichment of these RTB attest to their mantle plume origin and indicate the generation of parent magma from a plume-related enriched mantle source with EM 1 signature. Ba/Th (46-247), Ba/La (3.96-28.51) and Th/Nb (0.08-0.13) ratios suggest that the source enrichment process was marked by recycling of subduction-processed oceanic crust and lithospheric components into the mantle. Zr/Hf (37-41) and Zr/Ba (0.51-3.24) indicate involvement of an asthenospheric mantle source. The Rajahmundry basalts show affinity towards FOZO (focal zone mantle) and PSCL (post-Archaean subcontinental lithosphere) which reflect mixing between asthenospheric and lithospheric mantle components in their source. Origin of RTB magma is attributed to plume-lithosphere interaction and the upward movement of melt is facilitated by intrabasinal deep-seated faults in the K-G Basin.展开更多
基金CSIR for providing the funds to NGRI to carry out this research work in MIP-6201-28(CM)
文摘The Rajahmundry Trap Basalts (RTB) are erupted through fault-controlled fissures in the Krishna-Godavari Basin (K-G Basin) of Godavari Triple Junction, occurring as a unique outcrop sandwiched between Cretaceous and Tertiary sediments along the east coast of India. Detailed geochemical studies have revealed that RTB are mid-Ti (1.74-1.92) to high-Ti (2.04-2.81) basalts with a distinct quartz tholeiitic parentage. MgO (6.2-13.12 wt.%), Mg# (29-50) and Zr (109-202 ppm) suggest that these basalts evolved by fractional crystallization during the ascent of the parent magma along deep-seated fractures. Mod- erate to high fractionation of HREE, as indicated by (Gd/Yb)N ratios (1.71-2.31) of RTB, suggest their generation through 3-5% melting of a Fe-rich mantle corresponding to the stability fields of spinel and garnet peridotite at depths of 60-100 km. Low K2O/P2O5 (0.26-1.26), high TiO2/P2O5 (6.74-16.79), La/Nb (0.89-1.45), Nb/Th 〉 8 (8.35-13), negative anomalies at Rb reflect minimum contamination by granitic continental crust. (Nb/La)PM ratios (0.66-1.1) of RTB are attributed to endogenic contamination resulted through recycling of subducted oceanic slab into the mantle. Pronounced Ba enrichment with relative depletion in Rb indicates assimilation of Infra- and Inter-trappean sediments of estuarine to shallow marine character. Geochemical compositions such as A1203/TiO2 (3.88-6.83), medium to high TiO2 (1.74 -2.81 wt.%), positive Nb anomalies and LREE enrichment of these RTB attest to their mantle plume origin and indicate the generation of parent magma from a plume-related enriched mantle source with EM 1 signature. Ba/Th (46-247), Ba/La (3.96-28.51) and Th/Nb (0.08-0.13) ratios suggest that the source enrichment process was marked by recycling of subduction-processed oceanic crust and lithospheric components into the mantle. Zr/Hf (37-41) and Zr/Ba (0.51-3.24) indicate involvement of an asthenospheric mantle source. The Rajahmundry basalts show affinity towards FOZO (focal zone mantle) and PSCL (post-Archaean subcontinental lithosphere) which reflect mixing between asthenospheric and lithospheric mantle components in their source. Origin of RTB magma is attributed to plume-lithosphere interaction and the upward movement of melt is facilitated by intrabasinal deep-seated faults in the K-G Basin.