January's
LIP of the Month (corresponds
to "Giles" event, #88 in LIP record
database)
The Warakurna large igneous province: A new Mesoproterozoic large igneous
province in west-central Australia
Michael T.D. Wingate
Tectonics Special Research Centre,
School of Earth and Geographical Sciences,
University of Western Australia, Crawley 6009,
Western Australia
Franco Pirajno
Paul A. Morris
Geological Survey of Western Australia,
100 Plain Street, East Perth 6004,
Western Australia
Simplified
geology of southwest Australia, showing the distribution of ca. 1075
Ma igneous rocks of the Warakurna large igneous province (LIP). Numbers
after rock ages refer to plot B. BSGBangemall Supergroup; NNorthampton
inlier; MMullingarra inlier. B: Isotopic age determinations
for rocks of the Warakurna LIP, grouped according to isotopic system.
Error bars are ±2s or 95%; no precision was reported for results
26 and 27. The age of 1076 ± 3 Ma is the weighted mean of U-Pb
ages 19 (solid symbols) and is interpreted as the best estimate
of the age of the main phase of magmatism associated with the Warakurna
LIP.
Abstract
Coeval mafic igneous rocks emplaced rapidly over ~1,500,000 km2 in western
and central Australia represent the erosional remnants of a late Mesoproterozoic
large igneous province, named here the Warakurna large igneous province.
SHRIMP U-Pb dating of rocks separated by up to 1500 km indicates that
the main episode of magmatism occurred between 1078 and ca. 1070 Ma. The
Warakurna large igneous province includes layered mafic-ultramafic intrusions
and mafic to felsic volcanic rocks and dikes in central Australia, a 1000-km-long
mafic sill province in Western Australia, and several swarms of mafic
dikes. The large areal extent and short duration imply emplacement above
a mantle-plume head. Despite their wide separation, the mafic rocks have
similar MORB (mid-ocean-ridge basalt)normalized trace element patterns
and rare earth element characteristics. West-directed paleocurrents, westward
radiating dike swarms, and the occurrence of high-Mg rocks indicate that
the center of the plume head was located beneath central Australia. Other
late Mesoproterozoic large igneous provinces, in the Laurentia and Kalahari
cratons, appear to be significantly older than the Warakurna large igneous
province in Australia and thus are unlikely to be related to the same
mantle-plume head.
Whole-rock
lithogeochemical data for the Warakurna Large Igneous Province project
Whole-rock lithogeochemical data for 1465 Ma and 1070 Ma dolerites from
the Bangemall Supergroup in Western Australia, many of which comprise
part of the Warakurna Large Igneous Province project are now available.
Analytical data comprise major element chemistry, up to 32 trace elements,
REE (La-Lu) for most samples, and a compilation of analytical conditions.
An accompanying file contains 21 analyses of an inhouse reference material.
Sampling, preparation, and analytical methods are contained in a text
file.