[SCG62-P05] Subduction initiation at active spreading mid-ocean ridge indicated by ultrahigh temperature slab melting
Keywords:Subduction Initiation, Ridge Subduction, Slab Melting, Manila Trench, South China Sea, Lichi Mélange
The initiation of plate subduction is the last piece of the jigsaw puzzle of the plate tectonic theory. How the subduction of small oceanic plates commenced, and the magmatism of the subduction initiation has been particularly controversial. Here we report a new type of calc-alkaline andesite/dacite associated with initiation of subduction. The Lichi andesite/dacite (LAD) has typical geochemical features of slab melting, but abnormally displays relative enrichments in Nb-Ta and depletion in Ti and Pb. The LAD mineral assemblage consists mostly of plagioclase and two-pyroxenes with rare hornblende and biotite. No quartz or K-feldspar phenocrysts are observed. The presence of cristobalite in the matrix of the dacite and geochemical relations indicate slab melting occurs at an ultrahigh temperature and relatively low pressure environment, which is consistent with subduction initiation of an active spreading ridge along a transform fault.