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A new plate tectonic model of the Caribbean: Implications from a geochemical reconnaissance of Cuban Mesozoic volcanic rocks

Kerr, Andrew Craig ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0001-5569-4730, Iturralde-Vinent, Manuel A., Saunders, Andrew D., Babbs, Tanya L. and Tarney, John 1999. A new plate tectonic model of the Caribbean: Implications from a geochemical reconnaissance of Cuban Mesozoic volcanic rocks. Geological Society of America Bulletin 111 (11) , pp. 1581-1599. 10.1130/0016-7606(1999)111<1581:ANPTMO>2.3.CO;2

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Abstract

Accreted terranes, comprising a wide variety of Jurassic and Cretaceous igneous and sedimentary rocks, are an important and conspicuous feature of Cuban geology. Although the Mesozoic igneous rocks are generally poorly exposed and badly altered, we have collected and geochemically analyzed 25 samples that place new constraints on plate tectonic models of the Caribbean region. From our recognizance sampling, six main lava types have been identified within the Mesozoic igneous rocks of Cuba: rift basalts, oceanic tholeiites, backarc basin lavas, boninites, island arc tholeiites (IAT), and calc-alkaline lavas. We suggest that the rift-related basalts may have formed during the development of the proto-Caribbean, as the Yucatan block rifted away from northern South America in Jurassic–Early Cretaceous time. The Early Cretaceous oceanic tholeiites have flat rare earth element patterns, and are compositionally similar to Pacific mantle plume–derived oceanic plateaus of similar age. The Early Cretaceous arc-related rocks are either backarc basalts, boninites, or relatively trace element–depleted IAT lavas. A limited amount of geochemical and field evidence hints that two parallel arc systems existed in the western proto-Caribbean area in Early Cretaceous time. This leads us to speculate that in the proto-Caribbean at this time there was a western arc with a northeast-dipping subduction zone erupting IAT lavas (with Farallon plate being consumed), and a more eastern boninitic arc with a southwest-dipping subduction zone (with proto-Caribbean plate being consumed). This latter arc was relatively short lived and after being aborted was mostly eroded away. The Cretaceous primitive (IAT) arc survived and, later in Cretaceous time, as this arc system moved into the widening gap between North and South Americas, calc-alkaline lavas began to be erupted. The evidence suggests that the change from IAT to calc-alkaline lavas was gradual and not abrupt. These new data, although limited, provide geochemical constraints on the tectonic development of the northern part of the Caribbean plate. In consequence, we present a new plate tectonic model for this area of the Caribbean.

Item Type: Article
Date Type: Publication
Status: Published
Schools: Earth and Environmental Sciences
Subjects: Q Science > QE Geology
Publisher: Geological Society of America
ISSN: 0016-7606
Last Modified: 18 Oct 2022 12:23
URI: https://orca.cardiff.ac.uk/id/eprint/9604

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