Granitoids from St. Martin/Maarten Island, Caribbean: Insights on the role of mantle processes in the Lesser Antilles arc

article
The granitoids in St. Martin Island, Lesser Antilles – Caribbean, consist of granodiorites (Type-I low REE; Type-II high REE), leucotonalites, melatonalites and Qz-monzodiorites. These are I-type calc-alkaline granitoids, although classification of the newly identified melatonalites remains enigmatic, likely reflecting magma mixing between different sources for their formation. Geothermometry applications yield high formation temperatures for the melatonalites and the Type-II granodiorites exceeding by ∼100 °C those calculated for the other granitoids. Pressure conditions were relatively high for the melatonalites and granodiorites (∼4.2 and ∼ 4.0 kbar respectively), with the lowest assigned to the leucotonalites (∼1.8 kbar). Magnesiohornblende crystallized at the final crystallization stages (∼740 °C; ∼2.5 km depth), under hydrous (H2O = ∼3.5 wt%) and highly oxidizing conditions (ΔNNO up to +2.7). Fractional crystallization significantly contributed to the compositional variability of the evolved granitoid lithotypes, with plagioclase being preferably fractionated in the Type-I granodiorites, relative to the Type-II granodiorites that mostly involved K-feldspar removal. Additionally, fluctuation of the hydrous and slab-derived fluid fluxes further promoted granitoid differentiation. Geochemical and Sr-Nd isotopic data reveal restricted sediment contamination of the mantle wedge. Melatonalites and Type-II granodiorites appear to have been formed during the early evolution stages of subduction initiation, whereas leucotonalites represent the late-stage shallow crystallization granitoid phase. © 2024 Elsevier B.V.
TNO Identifier
1004012
ISSN
00244937
Source
Lithos, 494-495, pp. 1-19.
Publisher
Elsevier B.V.
Pages
1-19
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