The northern Cordilleran volcanic province encompasses a broad area of Neogene to Quaternary volcanism in northwestern British Columbia, the Yukon Territory, and adjacent eastern Alaska. Volcanic rocks of the northern Cordilleran volcanic province range in age from 20 Ma to ca. 200 yr B.P. and are dominantly alkali olivine basalt and hawaiite. A variety of more strongly alkaline rock types not commonly found in the North American Cordillera are locally abundant in the northern Cordilleran volcanic province. These include nephelinite, basanite, and peralkaline phonolite, trachyte, and comendite. The most MgO-rich nephelinites, basanites, and alkaline basalts from throughout the northern Cordilleran volcanic province show trace element abundances and isotopic compositions that are consistent with an asthenospheric source region similar to that for average oceanic island basalt and for post-5 Ma alkaline basalts from the Basin and Range.

Our petrologic observations help constrain the origin of northern Cordilleran volcanic province magmatism as well as lithosphere changes between the four major basement terranes that underlie the province. Results from phase equilibria calculations and the spatial distributions of volcanic rock types and magmatic inclusions are more consistent with the existence of thicker lithosphere beneath Stikinia, which underlies the southern part of the northern Cordilleran volcanic province, than beneath the Cache Creek and Yukon-Tanana terranes, which underlie the northern part of the northern Cordilleran volcanic province. Our results support a model for initiation of northern Cordilleran volcanic province magmatism due to incipient rifting of the northern Cordillera, driven by changes in relative plate motion between the Pacific and North American plates ca. 15–10 Ma.

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