Petrology, Geochemistry and Tectonic Implications of Magmatism in Northern Hunter Ridge-Kadavu Island Group (Fiji)

The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
A J. Crawford S M. Eggins P Maillet
Organization:
The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy
Pages:
5
File Size:
756 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1995

Abstract

TheFiji Islands are remnants of a once continuous Solomon-Vanuatu-Fiji-Tonga volcanic arc (the Vitiaz arc), located at the boundary between the Indian-Australian and Pacific plates. They record a history of: (i)                  arc volcanism the late Eocene to late Miocene, (ii)                an extensive magmatic response to arc rifting (5.5 - 3.0 Ma) during which volcanism was dominated by shoshonitic to tholeiitic basalts, and as rifting continued, (iii)               a transition from arc to intraplate volcanism.   The Hunter Ridge-Hunter Fracture Zone separates the inactive South Fiji Basin from the actively spreading North Fiji Basin, and has been considered to be a transform zone, almost parallel to the motion vector of the Australian plate. However rocks dredged during the 1993 æAlizeÆ cruise, from along the northern part of the Hunter Ridge are typical arc tholeiites, and therefore demand that subduction has occurred beneath the Hunter Ridge sometime during the last ~5 Ma. The Kadavu Island group, south westernmost Fiji, lies at the north-eastern end of the Hunter Ridge-Hunter Fracture Zone, and possibly results from oblique subduction of South Fiji Basin oceanic crust, which may have accompanied the anticlockwise rotation of Fiji during opening of the North Fiji Basin. These islands consist dominantly of 3.4 - 0.5 Ma old medium-high K andesites and dacites, with many traits typical of subduction-related volcanics, ie predominance of intermediate members (55 - 65% SiO2) no Fe enrichment, TiO2<1%, and negative Nb-Ta anomalies. These features contrast strongly with volcanics from elsewhere in Fiji around this time, where volcanic centres produced Om-like intraplate olivine basalts. The Kadavu Islands become gradually younger to the southwest, and show a significant decrease in K2O with time. The north easternmost islands (Astrolabe islands) containing the oldest rocks (~3 Ma) have shoshonitic affinities and are considered to be of similar age and composition to the youngest shoshonites found elsewhere in Fiji.
Citation

APA: A J. Crawford S M. Eggins P Maillet  (1995)  Petrology, Geochemistry and Tectonic Implications of Magmatism in Northern Hunter Ridge-Kadavu Island Group (Fiji)

MLA: A J. Crawford S M. Eggins P Maillet Petrology, Geochemistry and Tectonic Implications of Magmatism in Northern Hunter Ridge-Kadavu Island Group (Fiji). The Australasian Institute of Mining and Metallurgy, 1995.

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