Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W2004141509> ?p ?o ?g. }
- W2004141509 endingPage "92" @default.
- W2004141509 startingPage "69" @default.
- W2004141509 abstract "Tertiary and Quaternary magmatic rocks from West Sulawesi record the complex history of part of the Sundaland margin where subduction and collision have been and are still active. The present study, based on petrographic data, major- and trace-element chemistry and 40K40Ar dating aims to document the age and chemical characteristics of the magmatic formations from West Sulawesi and to determine the corresponding constraints on the geodynamic evolution of the Sundaland border. The West Sulawesi magmatic province includes the South Arm of Sulawesi (Ujung Pandang area), the western part of Central Sulawesi with the Toraja and Palu areas, and finally, the North Arm, extending from Palu to Manado, which includes the Tolitoli and Manado areas. Paleocene magmatic activity seems to be restricted to an episode of calc-alkaline magmatism in the Ujung Pandang area (61-59 Ma). The major Eocene (50-40 Ma) magmatic event is tholeiitic and is documented in all areas except in Ujung Pandang. It led to the emplacement of tholeiitic pillow-lavas and basaltic dykes of back-arc basin (BAB) affinity. These rocks are potential equivalents to the Celebes Sea basaltic basement. From Oligocene to Miocene, magmatic eruptions produced successively island-arc tholeiitic (IAT) and calc-alkaline (CA) rock series. The youngest IAT activity occurred around 18 Ma in the central part (Palu area) and around 14 Ma in the North Arm (Tolitoli area) while CA magmas were emplaced in the North Arm at ca. 18 Ma (Tolitoli and Manado areas). Typical calc-alkaline activity resumed only in the North Arm (Tolitoli and Manado areas) during the Late Miocene (9 Ma) and is still active in the Manado region. In other areas (Palu, Toraja and Ujung Pandang areas) an important and widespread magmatic event occurred between 13 and 10 Ma and emplaced K-rich magmas, either silica-undersaturated alkali-potassic basalts (AK), ultrapotassic basanites (UK) or shoshonites (SH). K-rich activity continued in the south until the Pleistocene (0.77 Ma) with alkali-potassic, ultrapotassic and shoshonitic magmas. In Central Sulawesi (Toraja and Palu areas) the most recent magmatic event occurred between 6.5 and 0.6 Ma. The corresponding products are granitic rocks and widely distributed rhyolitic pyroclastic flow deposits. All these rocks are acidic in character (SiO2 > 60%), with trace-element and isotopic signatures (SrNdPb) typical of a strong continental imprint. The most striking tectonic implication of this magmatic evolution is that West Sulawesi can no longer be considered as a typical magmatic arc as previously assumed. With the exception of the Manado area beneath which subduction is still active, calc-alkaline and island-arc tholeiitic lavas and plutonics are volumetrically minor with respect to K-rich magmas. Their occurrence through time is also fairly restricted, mostly to the period between 30 and 15 Ma. Another important feature is the occurrence of island-arc tholeiitic and calc-alkaline magmas crosscutting an older terrane of BAB affinity, the Tinombo Formation (Manado, Tolitoli and Palu areas). As this formation is being regarded as an equivalent to the Celebes Sea floor, the most likely explanation for this feature is the hypothesis of tectonic erosion linked to the NW-dipping subduction beneath the North Arm. The Late Miocene high-K magmatic activity in Central and South Sulawesi reflects the prevalence of a post-collisional tectonic regime following the docking of microcontinents of Australian origin to Central Sulawesi during Neogene times. The incompatible element-enriched character of these high-K rocks might reflect their derivation from a mantle source enriched through metasomatism related to a previous subduction event. Such a model cannot account for the Plio-Pleistocene CAK magmatism of Central Sulawesi, the acidic composition of which does not support a derivation from an ultrabasic source. The trace-element patterns of the CAK rocks are very similar to those of the high-grade metamorphics of Central Sulawesi, suggesting that the latter might represent their possible source. Such an anatectic model implies a collisional to post-collisional tectonic regime limited to Central Sulawesi, while a post-subduction regime prevailed in the south." @default.
- W2004141509 created "2016-06-24" @default.
- W2004141509 creator A5033398966 @default.
- W2004141509 creator A5051265987 @default.
- W2004141509 creator A5061410379 @default.
- W2004141509 creator A5061441545 @default.
- W2004141509 creator A5073745138 @default.
- W2004141509 creator A5077566853 @default.
- W2004141509 creator A5085117586 @default.
- W2004141509 creator A5090702630 @default.
- W2004141509 date "1997-04-01" @default.
- W2004141509 modified "2023-10-01" @default.
- W2004141509 title "Magmatic evolution of Sulawesi (Indonesia): constraints on the Cenozoic geodynamic history of the Sundaland active margin" @default.
- W2004141509 cites W1966697494 @default.
- W2004141509 cites W1973746549 @default.
- W2004141509 cites W1978465122 @default.
- W2004141509 cites W1990327655 @default.
- W2004141509 cites W1990737863 @default.
- W2004141509 cites W1994793346 @default.
- W2004141509 cites W1995869865 @default.
- W2004141509 cites W1997048572 @default.
- W2004141509 cites W1998805779 @default.
- W2004141509 cites W1999818536 @default.
- W2004141509 cites W2000879528 @default.
- W2004141509 cites W2009350839 @default.
- W2004141509 cites W2015714345 @default.
- W2004141509 cites W2018873335 @default.
- W2004141509 cites W2019700069 @default.
- W2004141509 cites W2022487643 @default.
- W2004141509 cites W2023285423 @default.
- W2004141509 cites W2024814277 @default.
- W2004141509 cites W2036884486 @default.
- W2004141509 cites W2043493801 @default.
- W2004141509 cites W2048277495 @default.
- W2004141509 cites W2058434842 @default.
- W2004141509 cites W2066948777 @default.
- W2004141509 cites W2072010233 @default.
- W2004141509 cites W2077932978 @default.
- W2004141509 cites W2081673195 @default.
- W2004141509 cites W2093097870 @default.
- W2004141509 cites W2095038610 @default.
- W2004141509 cites W2102340911 @default.
- W2004141509 cites W2131934558 @default.
- W2004141509 cites W2145604970 @default.
- W2004141509 cites W2145810683 @default.
- W2004141509 cites W2146147563 @default.
- W2004141509 cites W2326484271 @default.
- W2004141509 cites W2328273591 @default.
- W2004141509 doi "https://doi.org/10.1016/s0040-1951(96)00276-4" @default.
- W2004141509 hasPublicationYear "1997" @default.
- W2004141509 type Work @default.
- W2004141509 sameAs 2004141509 @default.
- W2004141509 citedByCount "84" @default.
- W2004141509 countsByYear W20041415092012 @default.
- W2004141509 countsByYear W20041415092013 @default.
- W2004141509 countsByYear W20041415092014 @default.
- W2004141509 countsByYear W20041415092016 @default.
- W2004141509 countsByYear W20041415092017 @default.
- W2004141509 countsByYear W20041415092018 @default.
- W2004141509 countsByYear W20041415092019 @default.
- W2004141509 countsByYear W20041415092020 @default.
- W2004141509 countsByYear W20041415092022 @default.
- W2004141509 countsByYear W20041415092023 @default.
- W2004141509 crossrefType "journal-article" @default.
- W2004141509 hasAuthorship W2004141509A5033398966 @default.
- W2004141509 hasAuthorship W2004141509A5051265987 @default.
- W2004141509 hasAuthorship W2004141509A5061410379 @default.
- W2004141509 hasAuthorship W2004141509A5061441545 @default.
- W2004141509 hasAuthorship W2004141509A5073745138 @default.
- W2004141509 hasAuthorship W2004141509A5077566853 @default.
- W2004141509 hasAuthorship W2004141509A5085117586 @default.
- W2004141509 hasAuthorship W2004141509A5090702630 @default.
- W2004141509 hasConcept C109007969 @default.
- W2004141509 hasConcept C127313418 @default.
- W2004141509 hasConcept C150999391 @default.
- W2004141509 hasConcept C151730666 @default.
- W2004141509 hasConcept C161509811 @default.
- W2004141509 hasConcept C162973429 @default.
- W2004141509 hasConcept C166957645 @default.
- W2004141509 hasConcept C17409809 @default.
- W2004141509 hasConcept C201867031 @default.
- W2004141509 hasConcept C205649164 @default.
- W2004141509 hasConcept C2781297371 @default.
- W2004141509 hasConcept C58097730 @default.
- W2004141509 hasConcept C59235061 @default.
- W2004141509 hasConcept C73707237 @default.
- W2004141509 hasConcept C77928131 @default.
- W2004141509 hasConcept C93253190 @default.
- W2004141509 hasConceptScore W2004141509C109007969 @default.
- W2004141509 hasConceptScore W2004141509C127313418 @default.
- W2004141509 hasConceptScore W2004141509C150999391 @default.
- W2004141509 hasConceptScore W2004141509C151730666 @default.
- W2004141509 hasConceptScore W2004141509C161509811 @default.
- W2004141509 hasConceptScore W2004141509C162973429 @default.
- W2004141509 hasConceptScore W2004141509C166957645 @default.
- W2004141509 hasConceptScore W2004141509C17409809 @default.
- W2004141509 hasConceptScore W2004141509C201867031 @default.
- W2004141509 hasConceptScore W2004141509C205649164 @default.