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Imaging downward granitic magma transport in the Rogaland Igneous Complex, SW Norway
39
Citations
23
References
2002
Year
Magmatic ProcessVolcanologyEngineeringSw NorwayEarth ScienceRogaland Igneous ComplexDownward Gravity‐driven FlowsGeochronologyGeological MappingNeotectonicsMarine GeologyMagmatismIgneous PetrogenesisGeologyUpward FlowsRock PropertiesTectonicsStructural GeologyEconomic GeologyGeochemistryIgneous ProcessCrust-mantle InteractionIgneous PetrologyPetrology
Combining geological mapping and petrological, structural and geophysical (gravity and seismic) data already available for the late Proterozoic Rogaland Igneous Complex of Norway allows the 3D shape of the Bjerkreim–Sokndal layered intrusion to be modelled as a thick cumulate series capped by massive granitic rocks. Using the latter data, along with the spectacular convergent linear flow pattern that covers both the cumulates and the felsic rocks of this chamber, evidence is presented to show that the granitic material was down‐dragged through the sinking of its high‐density mafic floor into lower density anorthosites and granulitic gneisses. This example illustrates that downward gravity‐driven flows of rocks were active, in addition to upward flows, in the building of the early crust up to late‐Proterozoic times, helping to explain the geochemical and structural complexities of the old crust.
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