Geochemistry and tectonic setting of the Central Loei volcanic rocks, Pak Chom area, Loei, northeastern Thailand
Panjasawatwong, Y. and Zaw, K. and Chantarameea, S. and Limtrakun, P. and Pirarai, K. (2006) Geochemistry and tectonic setting of the Central Loei volcanic rocks, Pak Chom area, Loei, northeastern Thailand. Journal of Asian Earth Sciences, 26 . pp. 77-90. | PDF - Full text restricted - Requires a PDF viewer 335Kb | |
Official URL: http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jseaes.2004.09.008 AbstractThe Central Loei volcanic rocks, as evidenced by those in the Pak Chom area, were formed in the Late Devonian-Early Carboniferous and can be separated into three magmatic groups: transitional tholeiitic basalt, tholeiitic microgabbro and calc-alkalic basalt/andesite on the basis
of immobile-element contents and ratios of least altered samples. All the tholeiitic microgabbro possibly occurred as dikes. Chemically, the transitional tholeittic basalt and tholeiitic microgabbro have higher abundances of TiO2, Ni and Cr relative to the calc-alkalic basalt/andesite
at similar values for FeO*/MgO; they also contain higher Ti/Zr but lower Zr/Nb. The transitional tholeiitic basalt has higher concentrations of P2O5 and Nb relative to the tholeiitic microgabbro at similar levels of FeO*/MgO, and also has higher ratios of Nb/Y and Ti/V, but lower values for Ti/Zr and Zr/Nb. In terms of chondrite normalized REE and N-MORB normalized patterns, the transitional tholeiitic basalt, tholeiitic basalt and calc-alkalic basalt/andesite are analogous to those from North Atlantic, Southwest Indian Ridge and New Britain Arc. On this basis, the Central Loei volcanic rocks are comprised of MORBs and oceanic island-arc lavas. These arc lavas may have erupted on an oceanic basement in the same ocean basin as those in the Chiang Rai-Chiang Mai volcanic belt. Repository Staff Only: item control page
|