Nicaraguan volcanoes record paleoceanographic changes accompanying closure of the Panama gateway

Publication Status is "Submitted" Or "In Press: 
LDEO Publication: 
Publication Type: 
Year of Publication: 
2002
Editor: 
Journal Title: 
Geology
Journal Date: 
Dec
Place Published: 
Tertiary Title: 
Volume: 
30
Issue: 
12
Pages: 
1087-1090
Section / Start page: 
Publisher: 
ISBN Number: 
0091-7613
ISSN Number: 
Edition: 
Short Title: 
Accession Number: 
ISI:000179738400009
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Call Number: 
Abstract: 

A major oceanographic event preserved in the Cocos plate sedimentary column survived subduction and is recorded in the changing composition of Nicaraguan magmas. A uranium increase in these magmas since the latest Miocene (after 7 Ma) resulted from the "carbonate crash" at 10 Ma and the ensuing high organic carbon burial in the sediments. The response of the arc to this paleoceanographic event requires near steady-state sediment recycling at this margin since 20 Ma. This relative stability in sediment subduction invites one of the first attempts to balance sedimentary input and arc output across a subduction zone. Calculations based on Th indicate that as much as 75% of the sedimentary column was subducted beneath the are. The Nicaraguan margin is one of the few places to observe such strong links between the oceans and the solid earth.

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624AZTimes Cited:12Cited References Count:39

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