Origin of Philippine Sea Basins During Subduction Initiation in the Western Pacific

Author:

Ishizuka Osamu12ORCID,Tani Kenichiro3,Taylor Rex N.4,Umino Susumu5ORCID,Sakamoto Izumi6,Yokoyama Yuka6,Ogitsu Itaru17,Shimoda Gen1ORCID,Harigane Yumiko1ORCID,Sato Taichi1ORCID,Ohara Yasuhiko289,Conway Christopher1,Perez Americus10ORCID,Fujii Masakazu11ORCID,Kusano Yuki1,Yagi Masatoshi6,Tamura Yoshihiko2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Geological Survey of Japan AIST Tsukuba Japan

2. Japan Agency for Marine‐Earth Science and Technology Yokosuka Japan

3. Department of Geology and Paleontology National Museum of Nature and Science Tsukuba‐shi Japan

4. School of Ocean and Earth Sciences University of Southampton Southampton UK

5. Division of Natural System Kanazawa University Kanazawa Japan

6. School of Marine Science and Technology Tokai University Shimizu Japan

7. Water Quality Division Environmental and Community Affairs Department Chiba Prefectural Government Chuo Japan

8. Hydrographic and Oceanographic Department of Japan Chiyoda‐ku Japan

9. Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences Nagoya University Nagoya Japan

10. Philippine Nuclear Research Institute Department of Science and Technology Quezon City Philippines

11. National Institute for Polar Research Tokyo Japan

Abstract

AbstractUnderstanding the age and dynamics of the overriding plates allows an assessment of competing subduction initiation hypotheses. The Izu‐Bonin‐Mariana margin in the Western Pacific is a key example of initiation and hence it is important to constrain the age and origin of the oldest igneous crust of the supra‐subduction Philippine Sea Plate. We present geochronological and geochemical data of igneous rocks from the oldest ocean basins of the Philippine Sea Plate: the West Philippine and Palau Basins. Basalts from these basins have enriched geochemical characteristics similar to the EM‐2‐like mantle component found in OIB‐like basalts associated with the Oki‐Daito mantle plume. Ages of basalts from the northernmost West Philippine Basin (WPB) and the Palau Basin range from 43.5 to 50.5 Ma, which is similar to the oldest samples associated with the Oki‐Daito mantle plume (48–50 Ma). This implies that the plume contributed to magmatism from the onset of basin formation. It also provides support for the proposition that rifting of the Mesozoic arc terrane and subsequent seafloor spreading of the WPB was triggered by the arrival of the Oki‐Daito mantle plume at the base of the lithosphere. The age of these Philippine Sea Basins implies that only the Mesozoic Daito Ridge Group and the Gagua Ridge existed as Philippine Sea Plate crust before subduction initiation. A major fault activity after 37 Ma in the northernmost WPB demonstrates that careful reconstruction of the Eocene Philippine Sea Plate is critical to understanding plate dynamics during subduction initiation in the Western Pacific.

Publisher

American Geophysical Union (AGU)

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