Age and origin of the West Kimberley lamproites, Western Australia

D. Phillips*, W. Clarke, A. L. Jaques

*Corresponding author for this work

    Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

    7 Citations (Scopus)

    Abstract

    New high precision 40Ar/39Ar ages are presented which more tightly constrain the eruption ages of the West Kimberley lamproites of northwestern Western Australia. The data show a southward progression in ages of the lamproites over a distance of ∼135 km, from ∼22.5 Ma in the northernmost lamproites of the Ellendale Field to ∼19 Ma in the Noonkanbah Field in the south, excluding the Walgidee Hill lamproite. The large (∼490 ha) zoned Walgidee Hills lamproite at the northern edge of the Noonkanbah Field is the youngest of the West Kimberley lamproites and represents a later pulse of lamproite magmatism at 17.4 Ma, >1 Ma after the main lamproite magmatism. The southward progression of lamproite ages extends across a wide swath from the Proterozoic King Leopold Orogen at the southern margin of the Kimberley Craton to the Phanerozoic Fitzroy Trough in the Canning Basin. The magmatism does not appear to be the result of the migration of a mantle plume, but more likely reflects small degrees of partial melting of old, thick, metasomatised lithosphere extending from the craton margin beneath the basin, with melting triggered by regional uplift and/or small-scale mantle convection at the craton margin. Emplacement of the lamproites likely exploited ancient trans-lithospheric structures associated with the Proterozoic orogen at the craton margin and structures associated with the formation of the Canning Basin in the Phanerozoic.

    Original languageEnglish
    Article number106913
    JournalLithos
    Volume432-433
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - 1 Dec 2022

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