Volume 26, Issue No. 2b, 2001
*Marc Constantin
*Département de Géologie et de Génie Géologique,
Université Laval, Québec, Canada, G1K 7P4
(e-mail: mconstan@ggl.ulaval.ca).
Keywords: geochemistry, ophiolite, basalt, trace element, lanthanide, Early Cenozoic. Vancouver Island, British Columbia.
ABSTRACT
Major and trace elements geochemistry of Early Eocene rocks from the
Metchosin Igneous Complex, a partial ophiolite located on Vancouver Island
provide insight on its paleotectonic origin. Major and trace elements composition
of volcanic rocks from the Metchosin Igneous complex indicate that they
have compositions akin to MORB. These volcanic rocks extend from N-MORB
to E-MORB compositions in various trace elements tectonic discriminant
diagrams, and therefore support the hypothesis that the Southern Vancouver
Ophiolite formed in a transitional tectonic setting, likely a divergent
plate margin located near a continent. Mantle normalized trace element
patterns of basalts from the Metchosin Igneous Complex are similar to those
of the Gulf of California. A plausible modern analogue is therefore the
Gulf of California of the Red Sea where a mid-ocean ridge developed into
a continental rift.