Origin of geochemical variability by arc-continent collision in the Biru Area, southern Sulawesi (Indonesia)

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Abstract

Analyses of igneous rocks from the Eocene calc-alkaline and Miocene polassic volcanic arc in southwest Sulawesi indicate that magmas became more heterogeneous in their trace element and Pb-Sr-Nd isotopic signature following the collision of the Buton microcontinent with the arc at ~ 15 Ma. Isotopic ratios become more 'continental' 4 my after the collisional event (87Sr/86Sr ≤ 0·7085, 143Nd/144Nd ≥ 0·5125, 206Pb/204Pb ≤ 19·2, 207Pb/204Pb ≤ 15·73, 208Pb/204Pb ≤ 39·4). As the overriding plate consists of young Sundaland crust, whereas the subducted sediment is likely to have been shed from a compositionally distinct microcontinent of Australian derivation, we can be certain that the continental isotopic signature reflects subduction of continental material rather than crustal contamination. The isotopic compositions of the magmas can be explained by the melting of a mixed mantle wedge, consisting of fluid-fluxed and sediment-modified MORB mantle. In this model, the maximum amount of sediment added to the mantle source is 10%.

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Elburg, M. A., Van Leeuwen, T., Foden, J., & Muhardjo. (2002). Origin of geochemical variability by arc-continent collision in the Biru Area, southern Sulawesi (Indonesia). Journal of Petrology, 43(4), 581–606. https://doi.org/10.1093/petrology/43.4.581

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