Anatomy of the Emeishan Mantle Plume Head: Insights From New Geochronologic, Geochemical, and Geologic Data

Author:

Li Hongbo12,Zhang Zhaochong1ORCID,Liu Ran34,Reichow Marc K.5,Zhu Jiang6,Ernst Richard78ORCID,Santosh M.19ORCID,Wang Wei4,Li Changquan1ORCID,Li Botong1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. State Key Laboratory of Geological Processes and Mineral Resources China University of Geosciences Beijing China

2. Geological Museum of China Beijing China

3. College of Geosciences China University of Petroleum Beijing China

4. Research Institute of Exploration and Development Southwest Oil & Gas Field Branch Company PetroChina Chengdu China

5. School of Geography Geology and the Environment University of Leicester Leicester UK

6. School of Earth Sciences Yunnan University Kunming China

7. Department of Earth Sciences Carleton University Ottawa ON Canada

8. Faculty of Geology and Geophysics Tomsk State University Tomsk Russia

9. Department of Earth Science University of Adelaide Adelaide SA Australia

Abstract

AbstractThe link between mantle plumes and the formation of large igneous provinces (LIPs) is well established although the anatomy of these remains equivocal. Recent experimental studies and geophysical data suggest that the mantle plume head is more likely to be irregular and asymmetric, rather than an axisymmetric flattened disk. The Emeishan large igneous province (ELIP) provides a unique opportunity to test this hypothesis. According to robust petrographic, geochronologic, and geochemical evidence from the late Permian basalts in the Sichuan Basin, and in conjunction with a comprehensive compilation of geologic maps and published geochemical data from the ELIP, we identified several giant radial “fingering” structures. Based on the shallow mantle source from the center to margin in the ELIP and relief of the lithosphere‐asthenosphere boundary, we propose a new mantle plume model to explain the evolution of the Emeishan plume periphery, where narrow finger‐like protrusions and plumelets developed outwards from the main body of the plume to the edges of the flattened plume head. Dragged fingers might have been torn apart into some plumelets, which dispersed and were trapped beneath the thinnest lithosphere relief, and eventually erupted to form small‐scale flood basalt in the Outer Zone of the ELIP.

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

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