Geochemistry and geochronology of the guajira eclogites, northern Colombia Academic Article

journal

  • Geologica Acta

abstract

  • The chemical composition of eclogites, found as boulders in a Tertiary conglomerate from the Guajira Peninsula, Colombia suggests that these rocks are mainly metamorphosed basaltic andesites. They are depleted in LILE elements compared to MORB, have a negative Nb-anomaly and flat to enriched REE patterns, suggesting that their protoliths evolved in a subduction related tectonic setting. They show island-arc affinities and are similar to primitive islandarc rocks described in the Caribbean. The geochemical characteristics are comparable to low-grade greenschists from the nearby Etpana Terrane, which are interpreted as part of a Cretaceous intra-oceanic arc. These data support evidence that the eclogites and the Etpana terrane rocks formed from the same volcano-sedimentary sequence. Part of this sequence was accreted onto the margin and another was incorporated into the subduction channel and metamorphosed at eclogite facies conditions. 40Ar-39Ar ages of 79.2ampersand-flag-changeplusmn;1.1Ma and 82.2ampersand-flag-changeplusmn;2.5Ma determined on white micas, separated from two eclogite samples, are interpreted to be related to the cooling of the main metamorphic event. The formation of a common volcano-sedimentary protolith and subsequent metamorphism of these units record the ongoing Late Cretaceous continental subduction of the South American margin within the Caribbean intra-oceanic arc subduction zone. This gave way to an arc-continent collision between the Caribbean and the South American plates, where this sequence was exhumed after the Campanian.

publication date

  • 2011-1-1

edition

  • 9

keywords

  • Campanian
  • Cretaceous
  • andesite
  • anomaly
  • arc-continent collision
  • chemical composition
  • conglomerate
  • cooling
  • eclogite
  • geochemistry
  • geochronology
  • greenschist
  • island arc
  • metamorphism
  • mid-ocean ridge basalt
  • protolith
  • rare earth element
  • rock
  • sedimentary sequence
  • subduction
  • subduction zone
  • tectonic setting
  • terrane
  • volcano

International Standard Serial Number (ISSN)

  • 1695-6133

number of pages

  • 19

start page

  • 425

end page

  • 443