During the Cenozoic, alkaline magmatism related to rifting in the Ross Sea embayment affected the basement of northern Victoria Land, Antarctica. Shallow intrusions supplied the necessary heat to cause groundwater circulation through permeable rocks, producing local hydrothermal systems. In the granitoid country rocks of the two adjacent areas of Mt. Monteagle and Mt. McGee, the biotite deltaD values range from -69% to -141% and from -66% to -183%, respectively, and K-feldspars show delta O-18 values as low as 3.7% and 4.4%. These values result from isotope exchange between igneous minerals and hydrothermal fluids with a dominant meteoric water component. Geological and tectonic histories of the two areas show marked similarities; therefore, different delta O-18 and deltaD values of hydrothermally altered rocks may be interpreted in terms of different isotopic composition of the waters feeding the hydrothermal systems. The isotopic shift of these meteoric waters indicates that climate change occurred in the time span between the 42 Ma intrusion of Mt. Monteagle and the 38 Ma intrusion of Mt. McGee, thus suggesting a cooling episode in the Ross Sea region during late Eocene time.

Fossil hydrothermal systems tracking Eocene climate change in Antarctica / Dallai, L; Ghezzo, C; Longinelli, A. - In: GEOLOGY. - ISSN 0091-7613. - 29:10(2001), pp. 931-934. [10.1130/0091-7613(2001)029<0931:FHSTEC>2.0.CO;2]

Fossil hydrothermal systems tracking Eocene climate change in Antarctica

Dallai L;
2001

Abstract

During the Cenozoic, alkaline magmatism related to rifting in the Ross Sea embayment affected the basement of northern Victoria Land, Antarctica. Shallow intrusions supplied the necessary heat to cause groundwater circulation through permeable rocks, producing local hydrothermal systems. In the granitoid country rocks of the two adjacent areas of Mt. Monteagle and Mt. McGee, the biotite deltaD values range from -69% to -141% and from -66% to -183%, respectively, and K-feldspars show delta O-18 values as low as 3.7% and 4.4%. These values result from isotope exchange between igneous minerals and hydrothermal fluids with a dominant meteoric water component. Geological and tectonic histories of the two areas show marked similarities; therefore, different delta O-18 and deltaD values of hydrothermally altered rocks may be interpreted in terms of different isotopic composition of the waters feeding the hydrothermal systems. The isotopic shift of these meteoric waters indicates that climate change occurred in the time span between the 42 Ma intrusion of Mt. Monteagle and the 38 Ma intrusion of Mt. McGee, thus suggesting a cooling episode in the Ross Sea region during late Eocene time.
2001
01 Pubblicazione su rivista::01a Articolo in rivista
Fossil hydrothermal systems tracking Eocene climate change in Antarctica / Dallai, L; Ghezzo, C; Longinelli, A. - In: GEOLOGY. - ISSN 0091-7613. - 29:10(2001), pp. 931-934. [10.1130/0091-7613(2001)029<0931:FHSTEC>2.0.CO;2]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11573/1528729
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