Lithostratigraphy of gabbro sections in ODP Hole 118-735B

DOI

We redescribed the ~0.5-km gabbro section drilled in Hole 735B at the Ocean Drilling Program Gulf Coast Repository. Included in this work was a redivision and clarification of the location and nature of the major lithologic boundaries and a division of the major units into subunits. In all, we found 495 distinct lithologic intervals in the core. Most of the section consists of a single olivine gabbro body having only minor cryptic variations, which we think represents a small intrusion. At the top of the section, the olivine gabbro is intercalated with a medium- to coarse-grained gabbronorite, which we postulate was intruded by the olivine gabbro. The base of the olivine gabbro has been intruded by troctolites and troctolitic gabbros, which may be the precursors of a major troctolite intrusive body immediately below the base of the hole. This section is variously crosscut by small microgabbro bodies, which are the products of crystallization and wall-rock reaction of small magma bodies that migrated through the olivine gabbro prior to complete solidification. Overall, the plutonic section drilled in Hole 735B is unlike those found at layered intrusions as it lacks evidence for extensive magmatic sedimentation. Rather, it appears to represent a plutonic basement composed of small, relatively short-lived, rapidly crystallized intrusions. This is consistent with the ephemeral volcanism and low rates of magma supply postulated for very slow-spreading ocean ridges.This whole section underwent "syntectonic differentiation": a process in which deformation and compaction of a rigid, partially molten gabbro drove intercumulus melt out of the olivine gabbro into ductile shear zones. Chemical exchange, precipitation of oxides, and trapping of the migrating melt at the end of deformation altered the gabbro in the shear zones to ferrogabbro. These oxide-rich horizons have the potential to be major shallow-dipping seismic reflectors. The largest such zone is 103 m thick and consists of foliated disseminated oxide olivine and oxide olivine gabbros of lithologic Units III and IV.The last igneous event was back-intrusion of trondhjemite veins that formed either by fractional crystallization from the interstitial melt and/or by wall rock anatexis of intruded amphibolites.Alteration and relatively rapid cooling of the gabbro body occurred by penetration and circulation of seawater into the plutonic section caused by thermal contraction and cracking under tensile stress, much as envisaged by Lister (1970). Initially, this circulation was greatly enhanced tectonically by the tensile component provided by lithospheric necking and the formation of brittle-ductile faults beneath the median valley. This circulation was sufficiently pervasive to alter about 25% of all the matrix pyroxene in the body, mostly to amphibole, in the amphibolite facies. Alteration was heaviest in the vicinity of the brittle-ductile faults, where formation of crack networks, cataclasis, and granulation were ongoing processes continuously creating porosity and permeability during deformation.At the end of the brittle-ductile deformation phase, the brittle-ductile fault zones became the most impermeable horizons in the core and suffered little additional alteration. This was due to the extensive syntectonic recrystallization of the matrix mineralogy, which effectively reset the stored elastic thermal strain to zero. In the relatively undeformed horizons, where the stored elastic thermal strain remained substantial, cracking and alteration continued under static conditions as the gabbro cooled, though at lower rates of seawater circulation, following a similar pattern to layered intrusions such as the Skaergaard Complex (e.g., Bird, 1986).Alteration of the massif nearly stopped within the middle amphibolite facies with the cessation of brittle-ductile deformation. Significant lower amphibolite facies diopside-bearing vein networks occur only within the undeformed olivine gabbros in Unit V. Only minor amounts of greenschist and zeolite facies mineralization are found, primarily overprinting early higher-temperature vein and crack networks in the undeformed gabbros. The sharp decrease in alteration below middle amphibolite facies is thought to result from reduced circulation of seawater that accompanied a sharp drop in the available tensile stress for cracking. This probably reflected the transfer of the gabbro body out of the zone of brittle-ductile deformation and lithospheric necking by the formation of a new set of master faults in the median valley closer to the axis of volcanism. Following this, alteration continued under static conditions and accompanying lower rates of seawater circulation with initiation of block uplift of the gabbro massif into the transverse ridge of the Atlantis II Fracture Zone.The last alteration/tectonic event evident within the core is a set of vertically oriented, irregular cracks, frequently covered with smectite. These cracks probably formed during unloading of the gabbros by erosion to sea level after its initial uplift to form an island. They are largely absent from the brittle-ductile deformation zones, indicating that insufficient stored thermal strain was available there (even after cooling from near 500°C to ambient temperature) to overcome the internal strength of the rock under lithostatic load.

Supplement to: Dick, Henry J B; Meyer, Peter S; Bloomer, Sherman H; Kirby, Stephen; Stakes, Debra S; Mawer, Christopher (1991): Lithostratigraphic evolution of an in-situ section of oceanic layer 3. In: Von Herzen, RP; Robinson, PT; et al. (eds.), Proceedings of the Ocean Drilling Program, Scientific Results, College Station, TX (Ocean Drilling Program), 118, 439-538

Identifier
DOI https://doi.org/10.1594/PANGAEA.758050
Related Identifier https://doi.org/10.2973/odp.proc.sr.118.128.1991
Metadata Access https://ws.pangaea.de/oai/provider?verb=GetRecord&metadataPrefix=datacite4&identifier=oai:pangaea.de:doi:10.1594/PANGAEA.758050
Provenance
Creator Dick, Henry J B; Meyer, Peter S; Bloomer, Sherman H; Kirby, Stephen; Stakes, Debra S; Mawer, Christopher
Publisher PANGAEA
Publication Year 1991
Rights Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported; https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/
OpenAccess true
Representation
Resource Type Supplementary Publication Series of Datasets; Collection
Format application/zip
Size 2 datasets
Discipline Earth System Research
Spatial Coverage (57.266 LON, -32.724 LAT); South Indian Ridge, South Indian Ocean
Temporal Coverage Begin 1987-12-06T04:45:00Z
Temporal Coverage End 1987-12-11T01:00:00Z