The Horokanai ophiolite is a geological complex located in the Kamuikotan tectonic belt about 30 km northwest of Asahikawa city, Hokkaido, Japan.[1][2] The ophiolite complex is exposed along either side of a north-dipping anticline in several blocks.[1]

Stratigraphy edit

Exact thicknesses of units within the Horokanai Ophiolite complex are not reliably estimable due to differences in stratigraphy and structure between different blocks.[1] However, the basic sequence of units within the complex as a whole has been described in several studies.

Overlying, unconformable Cretaceous sediments

GabbroicBasaltic Rocks (intruded by dolerite and plagio-granite dikes[2])

Ultra-Mafic Rocks (intruded by dikes and lenses of diorite rocks, olivine gabbro, and hornblende-gabbro pegmatite[2])

Underlying layer of Kamuikotan tectonic belt blueschist[1]

Metamorphism edit

The Horokanai ophiolite exhibits metamorphism of the low greenschist (upper Horokanai ophiolite) to low granulite (lower Horokanai ophiolite) facies.[1] Asahina et al. (1979)[1] describes the metamorphic alteration of the complex. The original dunite and harzburgite of the ultra-mafic lower portion of the ophiolite have largely been metamorphosed into serpentinite, with little to none of the original peridotite remaining. The orthopyroxenite is described as “Metagabbro.” What was originally a coarse-to-fine gabbro section is now a sequence of clinopyroxene-, schistose- and epidote-amphibolites. Finally, the upper basaltic pillow lavas and tuff flows have metamorphosed to amphibolite schists and “metabasalt.”[1]

Asahina et al. (1979)[1] presents two theories for the metamorphism of the Horokanai complex. The first theory claims that metamorphism takes place at a mid-ocean ridge with a high geothermal gradient, accompanied by shear and plastic flow. The second theory claims that metamorphism takes place within an island-arc complex, where the rocks making up the ophiolite serve as basement rocks.[1]

Origins edit

Ishizuka (1981)[2] proposes an abyssal tholeiitic composition for the Horokanai ophiolite complex, claiming that the chemical composition of the ophiolite more closely resembles that of an oceanic spreading ridge than that of an island arc or hotspot. The distinction was made by examining the Chromium, Nickel and Titanium abundances in the ophiolite, as well as relic spinel chemistry in Horokanai pillow basalts.[2]

Takashima et al. (2002)[3] examines the Gokurakudaira Formation - the uppermost mafic portion of the Horokanai ophiolite - in order to determine an origin. The formation exhibits MORB-like tholeiitic composition in agreement with the observations from Ishizuka.[2][3] However, Takashima et al. (2002)[3] presents other petrologic evidence that suggests a geologic fore-arc setting similar to the Lau Basin. They base this conclusion on the presence of picrite (with back-arc-associated pyroclastic and turbidite deposits) and high-Mg basaltic-andesite (commonly associated with fore-arc and back-arc settings) within the Gokurakudaira Formation. In their model, the formation of a spreading center within a fore-arc basin above a subducting plate constitutes the origin of the Horokanai ophiolite complex.[3]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o ASAHINA, TOSHIHIRO; KOMATSU, MASAYUKI (1979). "THE HOROKANAI OPHIOLITIC COMPLEX IN THE KAMUIKOTAN TECTONIC BELT, HOKKAIDO, JAPAN". The Journal of the Geological Society of Japan. 85 (6): 317–330_1. doi:10.5575/geosoc.85.317. ISSN 0016-7630.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m ISHIZUKA, HIDEO (1981). "Geochemistry of the Horokanai ophiolite in the Kamuikotan tectonic belt, Hokkaido, Japan". The Journal of the Geological Society of Japan. 87 (1): 17–34. doi:10.5575/geosoc.87.17. ISSN 0016-7630.
  3. ^ a b c d e Takashima, Reishi; Nishi, Hiroshi; Yoshida, Takeyoshi (2002). "Geology, petrology and tectonic setting of the Late Jurassic ophiolite in Hokkaido, Japan". Journal of Asian Earth Sciences. 21 (2): 197–215. doi:10.1016/s1367-9120(02)00028-7. hdl:2115/17184. ISSN 1367-9120.