Early Cretaceous transformation from Pacific to Neo-Tethys subduction in the SW Pacific Ocean: Constraints from Pb-Sr-Nd-Hf isotopes of the Philippine arc

2020 
Abstract The westward subduction of the Pacific plate interacted with the northward subduction of the eastern Neo-Tethys plate in the Early Cretaceous. However, the subduction polarities between these two plates in the Early Cretaceous is not well constrained. The proto-Philippine arc is suggested to have originated at the Pacific – Neo-Tethys intersection in the SW Pacific in the latest Jurassic – Early Cretaceous, and can provide information about the ancient interaction between these two plates. In this study, the oldest known Early Cretaceous mantle-derived arc volcanic rocks and slab-melting generated adakites occurring in the Philippine arc have been studied for Pb, Sr, Nd and Hf isotopes to discriminate the provenance of their mantle sources and/or subduction components. The 126 – 118 Ma Kansi island arc volcanics have Pacific-type Pb isotopes, suggesting that the subduction components in the source are mainly from the subducted Pacific plate. Their Hf-Nd isotopes give support to a mantle source that is isotopically transitional Pacific-Indian type. The formation of the Kansi volcanics dates the subduction of the Pacific Plate under the transitional Pacific-Indian mantle as Early Cretaceous. The subsequent generation of the 110 Ma Kansi adakitic diorites with the similar Pacific-type Pb isotopes indicates further partial melting of the subducted Pacific plate. In contrast, the post-110 Ma Lutopan adakitic diorites have Indian-type Pb isotopes, indicating the subsequent subduction of an Indian-type oceanic slab in the eastern Neo-Tethys tectonic regime. Therefore, the proto-Philippine arc is constrained to have originated at the intersection between Indian-type and Pacific-type oceanic crusts and mantle domains. The successive generation of these Early Cretaceous arc rocks in the Philippines indicates that a transformation of the tectonic regime from southwestward Pacific subduction to northeastward subduction of the eastern Neo-Tethys in the SW Pacific Ocean occurred at ca. 110 Ma, due to the abrupt change in drifting direction of the Pacific plate.
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