Initial results for the composition of the igneous basement of the Bowers and Shirshov Ridges (Bering Sea, NW Pacific)
2010
Wanke, Maren | Portnyagin, Maxim | Werner, Reinhard | Hauff, Folkmar | Hoernle, Kaj
The Bowers and Shirshov Ridges (hereafter BR and SR, respectively) are two prominent submarine structures ofunknown age and provenance in the Bering Sea. So far only a few geochemical data exist on the composition ofbasement rocks from the SR (Silantyev et al., 1985) and none for the BR. Age and geochemical data are crucialto evaluate if the ridges represent remnant island arcs (Cooper et al. 1981, Scholl 2007), former pieces ofKamchatka rifted away through seafloor spreading (SR: Baranov et al. 1991) or parts of the Mesozoic Hawaiianhot-spot (Steinberger & Gaina, 2007).Here we report the first geochemical data on the composition of the basement rocks from the BR and SR,recovered during KALMAR R/V SONNE cruise 201 (Legs 1b and 2) in 2009. Fresh to moderately alteredvolcanic rocks were dredged from the northern slope of the BR, from seamounts on the western extension of theBR and from the western slope of the central part of the SR. We studied the petrography of the samples andcarried out geochemical analyses of major and trace elements by XRF and ICPMS at ACME Lab (Vancouver,Canada) and CAU (Kiel).The rocks from the northwestern slope of the BR are clinopyroxene (cpx)-phyric basalts with minor amounts ofolivine (ol) and plagioclase (plag) microphenocrysts, as well as hbl-plag-cpx-bearing basaltic andesites andtrachyandesites. The rocks are strongly enriched in LREE (LaN/YbN = 3.2 – 8.5, N indicates normalization toprimitive mantle), fluid-mobile elements (Ba, U, K) relative to NMORB and exhibit clear negative anomalies ofHFSE (Nb, Ta and Ti) in primitive mantle-normalized incompatible element diagrams. The BR rocks also have amoderate adakitic signature, as indicated by elevated SrN/YN ratios (6.9 – 12.9). Hbl-cpx-plag trachybasalts fromthe SR have similar major and trace element compositions (LaN/YbN = 2.1 – 4.9) to the BR rocks. The othermagmatic series from the SR comprises massive trachyandesites, trachytes and dacites with rare phenocrysts ofplag and cpx. These rocks also have island-arc type incompatible element patterns and are distinct from otherrock types from the BR and SR with less LREE enriched patterns (LaN/YbN ~ 1.8) and a strong negative Euanomaly (Eu/Eu* = 0.74).Rocks dredged from a seamount on the western extension of the BR have very distinctive petrographic andgeochemical characteristics. These are ol-phyric pillow basalts with minor (less than 5%) amounts of plag andcpx. The freshest whole rocks and pillow-rim glasses have relatively smooth patterns of incompatible traceelements, akin to intraplate oceanic basalts and in some characteristic incompatible element ratios (e.g. ThN/BaN= 0.6, SrN/CeN = 1.2, LaN/YbN = 3.3) are similar to Hawaiian hotspot tholeiites.In summary, petrography and preliminary geochemical results indicate an island-arc origin for major parts of theBR and SR. The discovery of intraplate basalts suggests that fragments of the Emperor Seamount Chain couldalso be preserved in the Bering Sea (Steinberger & Gaina 2007) as seamounts and in the BR and SR basement.Our further studies will be focused on obtaining absolute age data for the studied rocks, which will allowcombining the petrologic data with tectonic and geodynamic models for the NW Pacific.
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