Petrotectonic evolution and melt modeling of the Penon Blanco Arc, central Sierra Nevada foothills, California
Petrotectonic evolution and melt modeling of the Penon Blanco Arc, central Sierra Nevada foothills, California
Geological Society of America Bulletin (July 2007) 119 (7-8): 1014-1024
- basalts
- California
- chemically precipitated rocks
- chert
- geochemistry
- high-field-strength elements
- igneous rocks
- Jurassic
- lava
- lithophile elements
- Mariposa County California
- melts
- Mesozoic
- metals
- partial melting
- pillow lava
- pyroclastics
- rare earths
- sedimentary rocks
- Sierra Nevada
- tectonics
- terranes
- tuff
- Tuolumne County California
- United States
- volcanic rocks
- volcaniclastics
- volcanism
- Mariposa Formation
- Penon Blanco
- Penon Blanco Formation
- Jasper Point Formation
- Cotton Creek Anticline
The Penon Blanco arc of the Jurassic-Triassic arc belt in central California is composed of the Jasper Point Formation, Penon Blanco Formation, and coeval Don Pedro intrusive suite, all exposed in the core of the Cotton Creek anticline. The Jasper Point Formation consists of approximately 900 m of massive to pillowed lavas and up to 50 m of depositionally overlying chert and transitional basalts. It passes upward into the Penon Blanco Formation, which is made up of approximately 700 m of crystal-lithic basaltic tuff, 1-3.5 km of augite-rich volcaniclastic rocks, and up to 3.5 km of massive to brecciated flows of augite-phyric basalt. The Penon Blanco Formation is paraconformably overlain by the Oxfordian-Kimmeridgian Mariposa Formation, which provides a minimum age of juxtaposition for the Penon Blanco arc against the inboard Calaveras Complex. New geochemical data from the Penon Blanco arc show that the two volcanic suites are geochemically distinct. Jasper Point basalts are tholeiitic and are characterized by high large ion lithophile element (LILE) abundances, moderate high field strength element (HFSE) and heavy rare earth element (HREE) abundances, and low Ti/V ratios. Penon Blanco basalts are calc-alkaline, have higher LILE abundances, lower HFSE and HREE abundances, and lower Ti/V ratios. Geochemical modeling of melt sources indicates that both units formed by melting of a depleted spinel-bearing mantle source at 30-60 km depth by low to moderate amounts of partial melting ( approximately 3%-5% for Jasper Point and 5%-7.5% for Penon Blanco). The geochemical modeling and field data suggest that the Jasper Point basalts are similar to normal mid-ocean-ridge basalt (N-MORB) and were associated with forearc rifting, while the Penon Blanco basalts represent the transition to arc volcanism and head-on subduction. This model is consistent with interpretations for a single ensimatic arc on the Jurassic margin of North America.