Magmatism and Dynamic Topography of Libya and Tibesti, North Africa
Abstract
In the continents, dynamic topography is difficult to determine because the density structure of the lithosphere is poorly known. It is generally agreed that hot upwelling mantle produces dynamic uplift whilst cold downwelling mantle causes regional subsidence. Calculating asthenospheric potential temperatures from basalts provides one important constraint on dynamic uplift at the present day and in the geologic record. The spatial and temporal distribution of eruptive products together with the compositional variation of lavas allows the origin of continental volcanic events to be interpreted. The Cenozoic Libyan volcanic field is characterized by a series of long wavelength topographic swells that may reflect sub-lithospheric dynamic processes. Admittance analysis of gravity and topographic data as well as seismic tomographic imaging suggest that a low density anomaly sits beneath the lithospheric plate. A new regional basaltic database of 188 XRF and ICP-MS analyses together with 39 40Ar-39Ar dates has been assembled. The Libyan volcanic field has been active from at least 17 Ma until the present day. Inverse modeling of rare earth elemental distributions shows that Libyan basalts were generated by melting of a predominantly anhydrous mixed peridotitic mantle source with an asthenospheric potential temperature of 1400 oC. Our results suggest that the existence and distribution of volcanism is caused by the combination of warm, upwelling asthenospheric mantle and thinner (< 100 km) lithosphere beneath Libya whereby melts may ascend to the surface through metasomatized lithospheric channels.
- Publication:
-
AGU Fall Meeting Abstracts
- Pub Date:
- December 2016
- Bibcode:
- 2016AGUFMDI51B2667B
- Keywords:
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- 1038 Mantle processes;
- GEOCHEMISTRYDE: 1140 Thermochronology;
- GEOCHRONOLOGYDE: 8121 Dynamics: convection currents;
- and mantle plumes;
- TECTONOPHYSICSDE: 8175 Tectonics and landscape evolution;
- TECTONOPHYSICS