Shallow differentiation of primitive arc magmas at the Jurassic Emigrant Gap mafic complex, Sierra Nevada, California


Journal article


J. Ryan-Davis, C. Bucholz, Thomas W Sisson
Journal of Petrology, 2026

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APA   Click to copy
Ryan-Davis, J., Bucholz, C., & Sisson, T. W. (2026). Shallow differentiation of primitive arc magmas at the Jurassic Emigrant Gap mafic complex, Sierra Nevada, California. Journal of Petrology.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Ryan-Davis, J., C. Bucholz, and Thomas W Sisson. “Shallow Differentiation of Primitive Arc Magmas at the Jurassic Emigrant Gap Mafic Complex, Sierra Nevada, California.” Journal of Petrology (2026).


MLA   Click to copy
Ryan-Davis, J., et al. “Shallow Differentiation of Primitive Arc Magmas at the Jurassic Emigrant Gap Mafic Complex, Sierra Nevada, California.” Journal of Petrology, 2026.


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@article{j2026a,
  title = {Shallow differentiation of primitive arc magmas at the Jurassic Emigrant Gap mafic complex, Sierra Nevada, California},
  year = {2026},
  journal = {Journal of Petrology},
  author = {Ryan-Davis, J. and Bucholz, C. and Sisson, Thomas W}
}

Abstract

The Emigrant Gap composite pluton exposes ultramafic to silicic intrusive rocks that preserve the chemical evolution of primitive mafic arc magmas and their open-system interactions in the upper crust during mid-Jurassic growth of the Sierra Nevada batholith (California). We present field and petrographic observations and mineral and whole-rock chemistry of the ~35 km2 ultramafic to dioritic Emigrant Gap mafic complex and an adjacent penecontemporaneous ~90 km2 granodiorite that together make up the composite pluton. In the Emigrant Gap mafic complex, four roughly central masses of dunite, wehrlite, and olivine clinopyroxenite are surrounded by weakly layered gabbronorite and non-layered diorite. The ultramafic rocks are cumulates formed from near-liquidus minerals of primitive arc magmas that accumulated in steep feeder zones with substantial modification by melt-mush reaction as primitive liquids repeatedly transited the mush-filled conduits. The dominant gabbronoritic rocks are the variably accumulative products of more advanced crystallization-differentiation of arc tholeiitic basalts and basaltic andesites. The adjacent granodiorite intrusion originated separately and preserves field and geochemical evidence for assimilation of metasedimentary rocks. Open-system hybridization between the gabbronoritic mushes and the granodioritic magma produced an intervening body of two-pyroxene diorite. We infer that the ultramafic rocks and gabbronorite of the Emigrant Gap mafic complex crystallized from near-primitive arc basaltic to basaltic andesitic magmas at ~0.15–0.3 GPa, with estimated fO2 of ≥ FMQ +1 and dissolved H2O concentrations of only ~0.5–2 wt.%. Notably, the Emigrant Gap composite pluton is distinct from other Mesozoic plutons in the Sierra Nevada batholith because of (1) its abundance of mafic and ultramafic rocks that crystallized from relatively primitive mafic melts and (2) the low inferred H2O concentrations of its parental magmas, indicated by a near absence of igneous amphibole and by the intermediate rather than calcic compositions of plagioclase. A Jurassic regional extension event probably accounts for the formation of relatively dry primitive arc magmas, as well as for their ascending to the upper crust.