Post-collisional batholiths do contribute to continental growth
Metadata
Show full item recordEditorial
Elsevier
Materia
Crustal growth Continental crust Post-collisional magmatism Metasomatized mantle Tectonics Batholith
Date
2023-01-11Referencia bibliográfica
D. Gómez-Frutos, A. Castro and G. Gutiérrez-Alonso. Post-collisional batholiths do contribute to continental growth. Earth and Planetary Science Letters 603 (2023) 117978. [https://doi.org/10.1016/j.epsl.2022.117978]
Sponsorship
Spanish Government PGC2018-096534-B-I00Abstract
Post-collisional voluminous silicic magmatism is represented in most orogens across the world in the
form of large granodiorite batholiths and minor intermediate and mafic intrusions, postdating 5-30 Ma
the age of the collisional paroxysm responsible of the main mountain building events. Post-collisional
mafic intrusions are acknowledged as a mechanism that contributes to long-term yet minor continental
growth. The silicic magmas forming the large batholiths, however, have been dismissed from the
crustal growth discussion due to bias in the conception that they always generate by recycling older
lower crustal igneous rocks. Contrary to this, geochemical and isotopic relations together with new
experimental data provided in this paper suggest that the post-collisional signature can be reproduced
without the implication of a crustal component, supporting a potential common origin for the two suites,
intermediate and silicic. That is, both suites can be derived from a metasomatized mantle source, thus
representing the injection of largely juvenile material to produce new continental crust. This inference is
contextualized within the supercontinent cycle, showing that the timing of post-collisional magmatism
accounts for the generation and preservation rates predicted by the existing models, since both reach
maximum values in the amalgamation-collisional stage of the supercontinent cycle, rather than in
the subduction stage. All together these inferences lead to think that post-Archean, post-collisional
magmatism has been significantly underestimated when computing continental crustal growth through
time.