Reconciling seismic structures and Late Cretaceous kimberlite magmatism in northern Alberta, Canada

Author:

Chen Yunfeng12,Gu Yu Jeffrey1,Heaman Larry M.3,Wu Lei4,Saygin Erdinc2,Hung Shu-Huei5

Affiliation:

1. Department of Physics, University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB T6G 2E1, Canada

2. Deep Earth Imaging, Future Science Platform, Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial Research Organisation (CSIRO), Perth, WA 6151, Australia

3. Department of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences, University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB T6G 2E3, Canada

4. Department of Geology, Curtin University, Perth, WA 6100, Australia

5. Department of Geosciences, National Taiwan University, Taipei, Taiwan

Abstract

Abstract The Late Cretaceous kimberlites in northern Alberta, Canada, intruded into the Paleoproterozoic crust and represent a nonconventional setting for the discovery of diamonds. Here, we examined the origin of kimberlite magmatism using a multidisciplinary approach. A new teleseismic survey reveals a low-velocity (−1%) corridor that connects two deep-rooted (>200 km) quasi-cylindrical anomalies underneath the Birch Mountains and Mountain Lake kimberlite fields. The radiometric data, including a new U-Pb perovskite age of 90.3 ± 2.6 Ma for the Mountain Lake intrusion, indicate a northeast-trending age progression in kimberlite magmatism, consistent with the (local) plate motion rate of North America constrained by global plate reconstructions. Taken together, these observations favor a deep stationary (relative to the lower mantle) source region for kimberlitic melt generation. Two competing models, mantle plume and slab subduction, can satisfy kinematic constraints and explain the exhumation of ultradeep diamonds. The plume hypothesis is less favorable due to the apparent age discrepancy between the oldest kimberlites (ca. 90 Ma) and the plume event (ca. 110 Ma). Alternatively, magma generation may have been facilitated by decompression of hydrous phases (e.g., wadsleyite and ringwoodite) within the mantle transition zone in response to thermal perturbations by a cold slab. The three-dimensional lithospheric structures largely controlled melt migration and intrusion processes during the Late Cretaceous kimberlite magmatism in northern Alberta.

Publisher

Geological Society of America

Subject

Geology

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