Electrical resistivity structure across the Late Cenozoic Abaga-Dalinor volcanic field, eastern China, from 3-D magnetotelluric imaging and its tectonic implications
[Display omitted] •Electrical resistivity model across the Late Cenozoic Abaga-Dalinor volcanic field (ADVF) reveals some striking features related to intraplate volcanism.•A remarkably high-conductivity zone lying in the middle-lower crust indicates the presence of saline fluids and a northwest-sou...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of Asian earth sciences 2023-12, Vol.258, p.105574, Article 105574 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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•Electrical resistivity model across the Late Cenozoic Abaga-Dalinor volcanic field (ADVF) reveals some striking features related to intraplate volcanism.•A remarkably high-conductivity zone lying in the middle-lower crust indicates the presence of saline fluids and a northwest-southeast trending fault.•A moderately highly-conductivity feature detected in the uppermost mantle indicates the presence of a low degree of partial melting.•The pre-existing tectonic weak zones such as ancient sutures, and major faults control the Late Cenozoic volcanism in the ADVF.•Late Cenozoic intraplate volcanism in the ADVF may be attributed to the decompression melting in a local asthenospheric upwelling.
The Abaga-Dalinor volcanic field (ADVF) in Inner Mongolia, China, located to the west of the North-South Gravity Lineament (NSGL), is the largest and less known area of Late Cenozoic intraplate volcanism in Northeast China. Knowledge of the subsurface structure beneath the ADVF will improve our understanding of its evolution process and formation mechanisms. New broadband magnetotelluric (MT) data were collected along a profile of about 300 km that crosses the major basaltic areas exposed at the surface in the ADVF and a series of east-north-east (ENE) trending faults. The electrical resistivity structure of the crust and uppermost mantle across the ADVF was generated by 3-D inversion of full impedance tensor and tipper data. This model reveals a thick high-resistivity layer (>1000 Ωm) in the upper crust that may represent the Precambrian basement and Late Paleozoic-Mesozoic granitic plutons. In contrast, high conductivity anomalies dominate the middle-lower crust. The northward-dipping high-conductivity feature at depths of 20–40 km below sea level under the Chagan Obo fault is suggested to be the involvement of the Early Paleozoic subducted oceanic crust. A remarkably high-conductivity zone (1–20 Ωm) exists in the middle-lower crust beneath the Abaga and Dalinor volcanic areas. It is explained to be a saline fluid zone of ∼0.45%–0.48% that exsolved from the partial melts as magma ascent rapidly. The impermeable upper crust traps these fluids in the middle-lower crust. A moderately high-conductivity anomaly in the uppermost mantle below near the Solonker Suture Zone (SSZ) is attributed to a minimum partial melt of ∼3–4% associated with the localized asthenospheric upwelling, which feeds the Abaga and Dalinor volcanos as a common magma source. Integrating |
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ISSN: | 1367-9120 1878-5786 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.jseaes.2023.105574 |