2020
DOI: 10.1007/s00445-020-01401-8
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Transient mantle cooling linked to regional volcanic shut-down and early rifting in the North Atlantic Igneous Province

Abstract: The Paleocene to Early Eocene Faroe Islands Basalt Group (FIBG) comprises a c. 6.5-km-thick lava flow-dominated sequence located within the centre of the North Atlantic Igneous Province (NAIP). The currently defined pre-breakup and syn-breakup sequences of the FIBG are separated by a significant volcanic hiatus, during which time the coal-bearing Prestfjall Formation was deposited. This major volcanic hiatus is identified across large parts of the NAIP and was preceded on the Faroe Islands by a reduction in er… Show more

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Cited by 15 publications
(22 citation statements)
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“…Similarly, geochemical enrichment of volcanic rocks of the East Greenland Margin (chondrite-normalized [Ce/Y]N and isotopes; Fitton et al, 1998;Tegner et al, 1998;Brown and Lesher, 2014) increases from south to north. In addition to scientific drilling results, evidence from the thick onshore Faroe Islands and East Greenland exposures reveal a temporal evolution that supports fluctuations in mantle potential temperature with time (e.g., Tegner et al, 1998;Millett et al, 2020a). Temporal fluctuations in mantle potential temperature are also invoked from independent geophysical observations, which reveal major uplift and subsidence events during the North Atlantic Igneous Province (NAIP) history that have been invoked as evidence for plume pulsing within the province (e.g.…”
Section: Geological Settingmentioning
confidence: 92%
“…Similarly, geochemical enrichment of volcanic rocks of the East Greenland Margin (chondrite-normalized [Ce/Y]N and isotopes; Fitton et al, 1998;Tegner et al, 1998;Brown and Lesher, 2014) increases from south to north. In addition to scientific drilling results, evidence from the thick onshore Faroe Islands and East Greenland exposures reveal a temporal evolution that supports fluctuations in mantle potential temperature with time (e.g., Tegner et al, 1998;Millett et al, 2020a). Temporal fluctuations in mantle potential temperature are also invoked from independent geophysical observations, which reveal major uplift and subsidence events during the North Atlantic Igneous Province (NAIP) history that have been invoked as evidence for plume pulsing within the province (e.g.…”
Section: Geological Settingmentioning
confidence: 92%
“…(a) TiO 2 versus MgO highlighting the division of the Rosebank samples into High‐Ti and Low‐Ti groups divided at 3 wt.% TiO 2 . (b) Rare Earth Element (REE) multi‐element plots normalised to Chondrite (Sun & McDonough, 1989), highlighting the range of Low‐Ti and High‐Ti Rosebank samples compared to samples from the Beinisvørð Formation of the Faroe Islands (Millett et al., 2020)…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although the basalts on Iceland, versus Central East Greenland and Faroe Islands, originate from different depths (e.g., Waight and Baker, 2012; Matthews et al., 2016), they can be divided into at least two separate mantle sources; a depleted low TiO 2 (<1.5%) and a more fusible enriched high TiO 2 (≥1.5%), source (Søager and Holm, 2009, 2011; Waight and Baker, 2012). The low TiO 2 (LoTi) melts have trace element ratio's Dy/Yb N ∼1–1.1 and La/Sm N < 1, suggesting a shallow, high degree of melting, while the high TiO 2 (HiTi) yield Dy/Yb N > 1.1; La/Sm N > 1, reflects a deeper, lower degree of melting (Fram and Lesher, 1993; Millett et al., 2017, 2020; Tegner et al., 1998a; Figures 3a and 3b). However, the LoTi basalts frequently re‐occur throughout the stratigraphic record (Figure 2a), often coincident with HiTi basalts (Jolley et al., 2012; Tegner et al., 1998a).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The base of the syn breakup basalts (Figure 2a) in both CEG and FI, comprise of high‐MgO olivine xenoliths (Larsen et al., 1999; Millett et al., 2020), that could petrologically mark destruction of deep magma chambers and continental breakup (Figure 2a). The cumulates are stratigraphically closely followed by sequences of LoTi MORB‐like flows (Jolley et al., 2012; Tegner et al., 1998a; Figure 2a), confirming continental breakup (Brooks, 2011).…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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