Skip to main content
Log in

A Ce/Nd isotope study of crustal contamination processes affecting Palaeocene magmas in Skye, Northwest Scotland

  • Published:
Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology Aims and scope Submit manuscript

Abstract

Twelve138Ce/136Ce isotope determinations, 31 Nd isotope analyses, and 31 REE profiles are presented for Tertiary basic to intermediate igneous rocks from the Isle of Skye, NW Scotland. The aim of this work is to precisely identify the contamination mechanisms of basic magmas emplaced through old crust, and to test the effectiveness of Ce isotope analysis as a petrogenetic tool.

Combined Ce/Nd isotope analysis enables the modelling of the light REE profiles of the mantle-derived precursors to contaminated lavas, using different crustal end-members, in order to compare these with the magmatic lineage of uncontaminated Skye lavas. The geochemical data support a contamination mechanism involving a granitic melt, produced either by large degree melting of Scourian granulitefacies acid sheets, or (possibly) by melting of intermediate gneiss out of isotopic equilibrium.

Basaltic lavas showing strong isotopic contamination effects yield calculated degrees of crustal contamination by large degree granitic melts of ca. 8 or 9% based on Ce and Nd isotopic data respectively. However, for lavas with liquidus temperatures of over 1250° C, the temperature dependence of the degree of contamination is weak.

The combination of this evidence with new and published Pb isotope data suggests that the bulk of crustal contamination of the Skye lavas occurred in sill complexes at distinct levels in the crust, rather than during the actual ascent of magma through the crust in dykes. It is suggested on the basis of published fluid dynamic and field evidence that the assimilation of large degree melts of acid gneiss by turbulently flowing magma is more likely than assimilation of small degree disequilibrium melts from more refractory intermediate gneisses.

It is concluded that Ce isotope analysis is a viable and useful adjunct to Nd isotope data in petrogenetic studies of continental igneous rocks emplaced through old basement.

This is a preview of subscription content, log in via an institution to check access.

Access this article

Price excludes VAT (USA)
Tax calculation will be finalised during checkout.

Instant access to the full article PDF.

Similar content being viewed by others

References

  • Arth JG (1976) Behaviour of trace elements during magmatic processes — a summary of theoretical models and their applications. J Res US Geol Surv 4:41–47

    Google Scholar 

  • Cooper RF, Kohlstedt DL (1984) Solution-precipitation enhanced diffusional creep of partially molten olivine-basalt aggregates during hot-pressing. Tectonophysics 107:207–233

    Google Scholar 

  • DePaolo DJ (1981) Trace element and isotopic effects of combined wallrock assimilation and fractional crystallisation. Earth Planet Sci Lett 53:189–202

    Google Scholar 

  • Dickin AP (1981) Isotope geochemistry of Tertiary igneous rocks from the Isle of Skye, NW Scotland. J Petrol 22:155–189

    Google Scholar 

  • Dickin AP (1984) Ce and Nd isotope models for crustal contamination in Skye. In: Dungan MA, Grove TL, Hildreth W (eds) Proceedings of the conference on open magmatic systems. Southern Methodist University, Dallas, pp 32–34

    Google Scholar 

  • Dickin AP (1987) La/Ce dating of Lewisian granulites to constrain the138La beta decay half-life. Nature 325:337–338

    Google Scholar 

  • Dickin AP, Exley RA (1981) Isotopic and geochemical evidence for magma mixing in the petrogenesis of the Coire Uaigneich Granophyre, Isle of Skye, NW Scotland. Contrib Mineral Petrol 76:98–108

    Google Scholar 

  • Dickin AP, Brown JL, Thompson RN, Halliday AN, Morrison MA (1984) Crustal contamination and the granite problem in the British Tertiary Volcanic Province. Philos Trans R Soc London Ser A310:755–780

    Google Scholar 

  • Hamilton PJ, Evensen NM, O'Nions RK, Tarney J (1979) Sm-Nd systematics of Lewisian gneisses: implications for the origin of granulites. Nature 277:25–28

    Google Scholar 

  • Huppert HE, Sparks RSJ (1985) Cooling and contamination of mafic and ultramafic magmas during ascent through continental crust. Earth Planet Sci Lett 74:371–386

    Google Scholar 

  • Kille IC, Thompson RN, Morrison MA, Thompson RF (1986) Field evidence for turbulence during flow of basalt magma through conduits from southwest Mull. Geol Mag 123:693–697

    Google Scholar 

  • McKenzie D (1985) The extraction of magma from the crust and mantle. Earth Planet Sci Lett 74:81–91

    Google Scholar 

  • Moorbath S, Welke H, Gale NH (1969) The significance of lead isotope studies in ancient high-grade metomorphic basement complexes, as exemplified by the Lewisian rocks of northwest Scotland. Earth Planet Sci Lett 6:245–256

    Google Scholar 

  • Morrison MA, Thompson RN, Dickin AP (1985) Geochemical evidence for complex magmatic plumbing during development of a continental volcanic centre. Geology 13:581–584

    Google Scholar 

  • Nakamura N, Tatsumoto M, Ludwig KR (1984) Applicability of La-Ce systematics to planetary systems. Proc 14th Lunar Planet Sci Conf J Geophys Res 89:B438–444

    Google Scholar 

  • Patchett PJ (1980) Thermal effects of basalt on continental crust and crustal contamination of magmas. Nature 283:559–561

    Google Scholar 

  • Richard P, Shimizu N, Allegre CJ (1976)143Nd/144Nd, a natural tracer: an application to oceanic basalts. Earth Planet Sci Lett 31:269–278

    Google Scholar 

  • Sato J, Hirose T (1981) Half-life of138La. Radiochem Radioanal Lett 46:145–152

    Google Scholar 

  • Tanaka T, Masuda A (1982) The La-Ce geochronometer: a new dating method. Nature 300:515–518

    Google Scholar 

  • Thirlwall MF (1982a) Systematic variation in chemistry and Nd-Sr isotopes across a Caledonian calc-alkaline arc: implications for source materials. Earth Planet Sci Lett 58:27–50

    Google Scholar 

  • Thirlwall MF (1982b) A triple filament method for rapid and precise analysis of rare earth elements by isotope dilution. Chem Geol 35:155–166

    Google Scholar 

  • Thirlwall MF, Jones NW (1983) Isotope geochemistry and contamination mechanisms of Tertiary lavas from Skye, Northwest Scotland. In: Hawkesworth CJ, Norry MJ (eds) Continental basalts and mantle xenoliths. Shiva Geol Ser, pp 186–208

  • Thompson RN (1974) Primary basalts and magma genesis. I. Skye, North-West Scotland. Contrib Mineral Petrol 52:213–232

    Google Scholar 

  • Thompson RN (1981) Thermal aspects of the origin of Hebridean Tertiary acid magmas. I. An experimental study of partial fusion of Lewisian gneisses and Torridonian sediments. Mineral Mag 44:161–170

    Google Scholar 

  • Thompson RN, Esson J, Dunham AC (1972) Major element chemical variation in the Eocene lavas of the Isle of Skye, Scotland. J Petrol 13:219–253

    Google Scholar 

  • Thompson RN, Gibson IL, Marriner GF, Mattey DP, Morrison MA (1980) Trace-element evidence of multistage mantle fusion and polybaric fractional crystallization in the Palaeocene lavas of Skye, NW Scotland. J Petrol 21:265–293

    Google Scholar 

  • Thompson RN, Dickin AP, Gibson IL, Morrison MA (1982) Elemental fingerprints of isotopic contamination of Hebridean Palaeocene mantle-derived magmas by Archaean sial. Contrib Mineral Petrol 79:159–168

    Google Scholar 

  • Wasserburg GL, Jacobson SB, De Paolo DJ, McCulloch MT, Wen T (1981) Precise determination of Sm/Nd ratios, Sm and Nd isotopic abundances in standard solutions. Geochim Cosmochim Acta 45:2311–2323

    Google Scholar 

  • Weaver BL, Tarney J (1980) Rare earth geochemistry of Lewisian granulite-facies gneisses, northwest Scotland: implications for the petrogenesis of the Archaean lower continental crust. Earth Planet Sci Lett 41:279–296

    Google Scholar 

Download references

Author information

Authors and Affiliations

Authors

Rights and permissions

Reprints and permissions

About this article

Cite this article

Dickin, A.P., Jones, N.W., Thirlwall, M.F. et al. A Ce/Nd isotope study of crustal contamination processes affecting Palaeocene magmas in Skye, Northwest Scotland. Contr. Mineral. and Petrol. 96, 455–464 (1987). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF01166690

Download citation

  • Received:

  • Accepted:

  • Issue Date:

  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF01166690

Keywords

Navigation