On the origin of fore-arc basins: new evidence of formation by rifting from the Jurassic of Alexander Island, Antarctica
The Middle Jurassic–Lower Cretaceous Fossil Bluff Group of Alexander Island, Antarctica represents the fill of a fore-arc basin unconformably overlying an accretionary complex. Like most fore-arc basins, this example had been considered to have a passive origin, as a topographic hollow between the arc and the trench-slope break. Recent discoveries of igneous rock coeval with sedimentation have altered this view. Oxfordian–Kimmeridgian basaltic and rhyolitic sills and lava flows are found in a restricted area at the north of the basin, within a single formation. Chemically, most basalts are high-Nb types, which cannot have originated in a supra-subduction zone setting. Since the age of emplacement of these rocks coincides with a gap in the record of plutonism in the Antarctic Peninsula volcanic arc, it is concluded that a late Jurassic pause in subduction led to active rifting to form the fore-arc basin.
Publication Details
Type
Journal ArticleTitle
On the origin of fore-arc basins: new evidence of formation by rifting from the Jurassic of Alexander Island, AntarcticaYear
1999Author(s)
Macdonald, D., Leat, P.T., Doubleday, P.A. and Kelly, S.R.A.Journal
Terra NovaVolume
11Issue
4Page(s)
186-193URL
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