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NARROW
GeoRef Subject
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all geography including DSDP/ODP Sites and Legs
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Canada
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Eastern Canada
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Maritime Provinces
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Nova Scotia
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Cape Breton Island (2)
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Newfoundland and Labrador
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Labrador
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Nain Massif (1)
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Newfoundland (1)
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Coast Ranges (1)
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Europe
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Alps
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Central Alps
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Rhaetian Alps
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Adamello Massif (1)
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Southern Europe
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Italy
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Lombardy Italy
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Adamello Massif (1)
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Santa Lucia Range (1)
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United States
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California
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Salinian Block (1)
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Maine
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Hancock County Maine (1)
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Knox County Maine (1)
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elements, isotopes
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metals
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rare earths (1)
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geologic age
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Paleozoic
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Cambrian
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Acadian (1)
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Middle Cambrian (1)
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lower Paleozoic (1)
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Silurian (1)
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upper Paleozoic (1)
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Precambrian (1)
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igneous rocks
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igneous rocks
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plutonic rocks
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anorthosite (1)
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diorites
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tonalite (1)
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gabbros (2)
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granites
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adamellite (1)
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granodiorites (2)
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quartz monzonite (1)
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volcanic rocks (2)
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metamorphic rocks
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metamorphic rocks (1)
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Primary terms
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Canada
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Eastern Canada
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Maritime Provinces
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Nova Scotia
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Cape Breton Island (2)
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-
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Newfoundland and Labrador
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Labrador
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Nain Massif (1)
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Newfoundland (1)
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-
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Europe
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Alps
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Central Alps
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Rhaetian Alps
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Adamello Massif (1)
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Southern Europe
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Italy
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Lombardy Italy
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Adamello Massif (1)
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faults (1)
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geochemistry (1)
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igneous rocks
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plutonic rocks
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anorthosite (1)
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diorites
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tonalite (1)
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gabbros (2)
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granites
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adamellite (1)
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granodiorites (2)
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quartz monzonite (1)
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volcanic rocks (2)
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inclusions (1)
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intrusions (5)
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magmas (3)
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metals
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rare earths (1)
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metamorphic rocks (1)
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metamorphism (1)
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Paleozoic
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Cambrian
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Acadian (1)
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Middle Cambrian (1)
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lower Paleozoic (1)
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Silurian (1)
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upper Paleozoic (1)
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petrology (3)
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Precambrian (1)
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stratigraphy (1)
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structural geology (1)
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tectonics (2)
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United States
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California
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Salinian Block (1)
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Maine
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Hancock County Maine (1)
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Knox County Maine (1)
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Plutonic record of a caldera-forming silicic eruption: The shatter zone of the Cadillac Mountain granite, coastal Maine
Mafic replenishments into floored silicic magma chambers
Discrete stoping events in granite plutons: A signature of eruptions from silicic magma chambers?
The mid-Miocene Aztec Wash pluton is divisible into a relatively homogeneous portion entirely comprising granites (the G zone, or GZ), and an extremely heterogeneous zone (HZ) that includes the products of the mingling, mixing and fractional crystallisation of mafic and felsic magmas. Though far less variable than the HZ, the GZ nonetheless records a dynamic history characterised by cyclic deposition of the solidifying products of the felsic portion of a recharging, open-system magma chamber. Tilting has exposed a 5-km section through the GZ and adjacent portions of the HZ. A porphyry is interpreted as a remnant of a chilled roof zone that marks the first stage of felsic GZ intrusion. Subsequent recharging by felsic and mafic magma, reflected by repeated cycles of crystal accumulation and melt segregation in the GZ and emplacement of mafic flows in the HZ, rejuvenated and maintained the chamber. Kilometre-scale lobes of mafic HZ material were deposited as prograding tongues into the GZ during periods of increased mafic input. Thus, they are lateral equivalents of the cumulate GZ granites with which they interfinger. Conglomerate-like units comprising rounded, matrix-supported intermediate clasts in cumulate granite are located immediately above the lobes. These ‘conglomerates’ appear to represent debris flows shed from sloping upper surfaces of the lobes. Thus, the GZ can be viewed as comprising distal facies, remote from the site of mafic recharging in the HZ, and the HZ as comprising proximal facies. Elemental chemistry suggests that the GZ cumulate granites represent a second-stage accumulation from an already evolved melt, and that coarse, more mafic, feldspar+biotite+accessory mineral ± hornblende rocks trapped between mafic sheets in the HZ are the initial cumulates. Fractionated melt accumulated roofward and laterally, and was the direct parent of the ‘evolved’ GZ cumulates. The most highly fractionated, fluid-rich melts accumulated at the roof.