Published May 1, 2024 | Published
Journal Article Open

Mafic intrusions record mantle inputs and crustal thickness in the eastern Sierra Nevada batholith, California, USA

  • 1. ROR icon Purdue University West Lafayette
  • 2. ROR icon California Institute of Technology

Abstract

Contributions of heat and/or mass from mafic magmas are commonly invoked in models of voluminous granodiorite and andesite generation in magmatic and volcanic arcs worldwide. However, mafic intrusions are a volumetrically minor component in most arc batholiths. This is the case in the Sierra Nevada batholith, California, USA, where gabbro and diorite plutons are smaller and less abundant than the granitoid suites that make up the bulk of the batholith. Here, we constrain the timing and geochemistry of mafic intrusions in the Sierra Nevada batholith to assess the role of these compositions in arc batholith construction. Previous detailed studies on a limited number of mafic intrusions demonstrate that they formed penecontemporaneously with the felsic batholith, but there is a need for a broader survey of mafic plutons using modern geochronological techniques. New U-Pb zircon ages for 13 gabbro to diorite plutons and geochemistry from 17 mafic intrusions in the eastern Sierra Nevada batholith document two main episodes of mafic magmatism in the eastern Sierra Nevada batholith, from 168 Ma to 145 Ma and from 100 Ma to 89 Ma. These episodes overlap with the ages of granitoid plutons in the eastern Sierra Nevada batholith, including the Late Jurassic Palisade Crest and Late Cretaceous John Muir intrusive suites, in addition to other felsic plutons dated in the eastern Sierra Nevada batholith. Non-primitive mineral compositions in the mafic bodies indicate that their parental magmas are the evolved products of mantle-derived basalts that first differentiated in the lower crust prior to ascent and crystallization in the upper crust. The presence of rocks with cumulate textures, as well as a wide range of bulk-rock compositions (SiO2 wt% 38–64, Mg# 39–74), show that magmatic differentiation continued within each mafic body after intrusion into the upper crust. Sr/Y ratios in melt-like (i.e., non-cumulate) mafic samples suggest that the crustal thickness of the Sierra Nevada batholith was roughly 30 km in the Early Jurassic and increased to ~44 km by the Late Cretaceous. Concomitant intrusion of mafic melts along with voluminous granitoid plutons supports mantle melting as a major contributor of heat and magmatic volumes to the crust during construction of the eastern Sierra Nevada batholith.

Copyright and License

© 2023 Geological Society of America.

Acknowledgement

We are grateful to many field assistants over the years: J. Biasi, A. Trussell, M. Barickman, E. Sosa, S. Newall, B. Ratschbacher, and L. Lewis. We thank the Arizona Laserchron Center for assistance with LA-ICP-MS analyses. The geochronology was funded by an AGeS2 award to MJL, under National Science Foundation grant nos. EAR-1759200 and EAR-1759353. Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this material are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the National Science Foundation. Thank you to the AGeS program for its support. We thank Drew Coleman, Joshua Schwartz, and an anonymous reviewer of a previous version of this work for comments that improved the manuscript. We are also thankful to Tom Sisson and an anonymous reviewer for their constructive reviews, and editors Robinson Cecil and Mihai Ducea for management and comments on this manuscript.

Supplemental Material

Supplemental Figures (PDF) include maps, thin section and zircon images, figures used to display geochronological data for individual samples, and additional bulk-rock chemistry plots. The Supplemental Tables (XLSX) give the GPS locations of our samples, as well as bulk-rock chemistry, mineral chemistry, and zircon isotopic data.

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Additional details

Created:
January 9, 2025
Modified:
January 9, 2025