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The Chicxulub impact structure reveals the first in-situ Jurassic magmatic intrusions of the Yucatan Peninsula, Mexico
de Graaff, S.J.; Ross, C.H.; Feignon, J.G.; Kaskes, P.; Gulick, S.P.S.; Goderis, S.; Dehais, T.; Debaille, V.; Ferriere, L.; Koeberl, C.; Mattielli, N.; Stockli, D.F.; Claeys, P. (2023). The Chicxulub impact structure reveals the first in-situ Jurassic magmatic intrusions of the Yucatan Peninsula, Mexico. Lithos 436: 106953. https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.lithos.2022.106953
In: Lithos. Elsevier: Amsterdam. ISSN 0024-4937; e-ISSN 1872-6143, more
Peer reviewed article  

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Keyword
    Marine/Coastal
Author keywords
    Chicxulub impact structure; Gulf of Mexico opening; Impact Melt Rock; Jurassic pre-impact magmatic dikes; Geochronology; Petrography

Authors  Top 
  • de Graaff, S.J., more
  • Ross, C.H.
  • Feignon, J.G.
  • Kaskes, P., more
  • Gulick, S.P.S.
  • Goderis, S., more
  • Dehais, T., more
  • Debaille, V., more
  • Ferriere, L.
  • Koeberl, C.
  • Mattielli, N., more
  • Stockli, D.F.
  • Claeys, P., more

Abstract
    Impact events that create complex craters excavate mid-to lower-crustal rocks, offering a unique perspective on the interior composition and internal dynamics of planetary bodies. On the Yucatan Peninsula, Mexico, the surface geology mainly consists of similar to 3 km thick sedimentary rocks, with a lack of exposure of crystalline basement in many areas. Consequently, current understanding of the Yucatan subsurface is largely based on impact ejecta and drill cores recovered from the 180-200-km-diameter Chicxulub impact structure. In this study, we present the first apatite and titanite U-Pb ages for pre-impact dacitic, doleritic, and felsitic magmatic dikes preserved in Chicxulub's peak ring sampled during the 2016 IODP-ICDP Expedition 364. Dating yielded two age groups, with Carboniferous dacites (328-318 Ma) and a felsite (330 +/- 9 Ma) overlapping in age with most of the granitoid basement sampled in the Expedition 364 drill core, as well as Jurassic dolerites (169-159 Ma) and a felsite (158 +/- 19 Ma) that represent the first in situ sampling of Jurassic-age magmatic intrusions for the Yucatan Peninsula. Further investigation of the Nd, Sr, and Hf isotopic compositions of these pre-impact lithologies and impact melt rocks from the peak ring structure suggest that dolerites generally contributed up to similar to 10 vol% of the Chicxulub impact melt rock sampled in the peak ring. This percentage implies that the dolerites comprised a large part of the Yucatan subsurface by volume, representing a hitherto unsampled pervasive Jurassic magmatic phase. We interpret this magmatic phase to be related to the opening of the Gulf of Mexico, representing the first physical sampling of lithologies associated with the southern extension of the opening of the Gulf of Mexico and likely constraining its onset to the Late Middle Jurassic.

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