Chapter 19: Magmatic components of a tilted plutonic system, Klamath Mountains, California

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Abstract

The Slinkard pluton (SP) and Wooley Creek batholith (WCB) are the lower and upper parts, respectively, of a tilted Middle Jurassic magma system. The SP and lower WCB intruded structurally lower ophiolitic mélange of the Marble Mountain terrane; the upper WCB intruded successively structurally higher metavolcanic and metasedimentary rocks of the western and eastern Hayfork terranes. The predominant volume of the system comprised a two-layer chamber in which an upper dacitic magma crystallized to form tonalite to granite in the upper WCB and a lower andesitic magma crystallized to form gabbro to tonalite in the lower WCB and SP. The upper part of the system had Sri, = 0.7043 and a range of δ18O from +8.7 to +11.2%o; the lower part had average Sri = 0.7046 and δ18O from +8.1 to +8.8%o The two layers of the system are separated by a transition zone that is intermediate in isotopie composition. The compositional differences between upper and lower parts of the system can be explained as (1) the result of intrusion of two separate pods of noncogenetic magma, or (2) the product of in situ assimilation-fractional crystallization. The second explanation requires that a relatively 87Sr-rich contaminant such as the structurally lower Marble Mountain terrane was assimilated in the lower part of the system, whereas an 18O-rich, generally 87Sr-poor contaminant such as the structurally intermediate western Hayfork terrane was assimilated by the upper part. Trace-element evidence suggests that gradational upward zoning (from gabbro to granite) resulted from an upward decrease in the efficiency of crystal-melt segregation and crystal accumulation. H2O-rich basaltic magma preceded development of the two-layer system, and basaltic pulses into the lower part of the system continued during most of its solidification history. Most basaltic rocks display evidence of some degree of fractional crystallization and interaction with crustal rocks; however, a few have low Sri and high concentrations of Cr and Ni, characteristics of undifferentiated mantle melts. Two-mica granite of the western Slinkard pluton cannot be related to the remainder of the system by fractional crystallization. High δ18O, high Ba, and low Sr abundances suggest that the two-mica granite is probably a partial melt of crustal material.

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Publication type Book chapter
Publication Subtype Book Chapter
Title Chapter 19: Magmatic components of a tilted plutonic system, Klamath Mountains, California
DOI 10.1130/MEM174-p331
Volume 174
Year Published 1990
Language English
Publisher Geological Society of America
Description 16 p.
Larger Work Type Book
Larger Work Subtype Monograph
Larger Work Title The nature and origin of Cordilleran magmatism
First page 331
Last page 346
Country United States
State California
Other Geospatial Klamath Mountains
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