Craig B. Grimes
Mississippi State University
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Featured researches published by Craig B. Grimes.
Geology | 2007
Craig B. Grimes; Barbara E. John; Peter B. Kelemen; Frank K. Mazdab; J. L. Wooden; Michael J. Cheadle; K. Hanghoj; Joshua J. Schwartz
We present newly acquired trace element compositions for more than 300 zircon grains in 36 gabbros formed at the slow-spreading Mid-Atlantic and Southwest Indian Ridges. Rare earth element patterns for zircon from modern oceanic crust completely overlap with those for zircon crystallized in continental granitoids. However, plots of U versus Yb and U/Yb versus Hf or Y discriminate zircons crystallized in oceanic crust from continental zircon, and provide a relatively robust method for distinguishing zircons from these environments. Approximately 80% of the modern ocean crust zircons are distinct from the fi eld defi ned by more than 1700 continental zircons from Archean and Phanerozoic samples. These discrimination diagrams provide a new tool for fi ngerprinting ocean crust zircons derived from reservoirs like that of modern mid-ocean ridge basalt (MORB) in both modern and ancient detrital zircon populations. Hadean detrital zircons previously reported from the Acasta Gneiss, Canada, and the Narryer Gneiss terrane, Western Australia, plot in the continental granitoid fi eld, supporting hypotheses that at least some Hadean detrital zircons crystallized in continental crust forming magmas and not from a reservoir like modern MORB.
Geochemistry Geophysics Geosystems | 2008
Craig B. Grimes; Barbara E. John; Michael J. Cheadle; Joseph L. Wooden
Sensitive high-resolution ion microprobe (SHRIMP) U-Pb zircon ages of 24 samples from oceanic crust recovered in Integrated Ocean Drilling Program (IODP) Hole U1309D and from the surface of Atlantis Massif, Mid-Atlantic Ridge (MAR) (30°N) document a protracted history of accretion in the footwall to an oceanic detachment fault. Ages for 18 samples of evolved Fe-Ti oxide gabbro and felsic dikes collected 40–1415 m below seafloor in U1309D yield a weighted mean of 1.20 ± 0.03 Ma (mean square of weighted deviates = 7.1). However, the ages range from 1.08 ± 0.07 Ma and 1.28 ± 0.05 Ma indicating crustal construction occurred over a minimum of 100–200 ka. The zircon ages, along with petrologic observations, indicate at least 2 major periods of intrusive activity with age peaks separated by 70 ka. The oldest ages are observed below 600 mbsf, an observation inconsistent with models requiring constant depth melt intrusion beneath a detachment fault. The data are most consistent with a “multiple sill” model whereby sills intrude at random depths below the ridge axis over a length scale greater than 1.4 km. Zircon ages from broadly spaced samples collected along the southern ridge of Atlantis Massif yield a detachment fault slip rate of 28.7 ± 6.7 mm/a and imply significant asymmetric plate spreading (up to 100% on the North American plate) for at least 200 ka during core complex formation.
Journal of Geophysical Research | 2011
Donna K. Blackman; Benoit Ildefonse; Barbara E. John; Yasuhiko Ohara; D. J. Miller; Natsue Abe; M. Abratis; E. S. Andal; M. Andreani; Satoshi Awaji; James S. Beard; Daniele Brunelli; A. B. Charney; David M. Christie; John A. Collins; A. G. Delacour; Heike Delius; Mary Drouin; F. Einaudi; J. Escartin; B. R. Frost; Gretchen L. Früh-Green; Patricia Fryer; Jeffrey S. Gee; Marguerite Godard; Craig B. Grimes; A. Halfpenny; H.-E. Hansen; A. C. Harris; Akihiro Tamura
Expeditions 304 and 305 of the Integrated Ocean Drilling Program cored and logged a 1.4 km section of the domal core of Atlantis Massif. Postdrilling research results summarized here constrain the structure and lithology of the Central Dome of this oceanic core complex. The dominantly gabbroic sequence recovered contrasts with predrilling predictions; application of the ground truth in subsequent geophysical processing has produced self-consistent models for the Central Dome. The presence of many thin interfingered petrologic units indicates that the intrusions forming the domal core were emplaced over a minimum of 100-220 kyr, and not as a single magma pulse. Isotopic and mineralogical alteration is intense in the upper 100 m but decreases in intensity with depth. Below 800 m, alteration is restricted to narrow zones surrounding faults, veins, igneous contacts, and to an interval of locally intense serpentinization in olivine-rich troctolite. Hydration of the lithosphere occurred over the complete range of temperature conditions from granulite to zeolite facies, but was predominantly in the amphibolite and greenschist range. Deformation of the sequence was remarkably localized, despite paleomagnetic indications that the dome has undergone at least 45 degrees rotation, presumably during unroofing via detachment faulting. Both the deformation pattern and the lithology contrast with what is known from seafloor studies on the adjacent Southern Ridge of the massif. There, the detachment capping the domal core deformed a 100 m thick zone and serpentinized peridotite comprises similar to 70% of recovered samples. We develop a working model of the evolution of Atlantis Massif over the past 2 Myr, outlining several stages that could explain the observed similarities and differences between the Central Dome and the Southern Ridge.
Geochemistry Geophysics Geosystems | 2011
Craig B. Grimes; Michael J. Cheadle; Barbara E. John; Peter W. Reiners; Joseph L. Wooden
Oceanic detachment faulting represents a distinct mode of seafloor spreading at slow spreading mid-ocean ridges, but many questions persist about the thermal evolution and depth of faulting. We present new Pb/U and (U-Th)/He zircon ages and combine them with magnetic anomaly ages to define the cooling histories of gabbroic crust exposed by oceanic detachment faults at three sites along the Mid-Atlantic Ridge (Ocean Drilling Program (ODP) holes 1270D and 1275D near the 15°20′N Transform, and Atlantis Massif at 30°N). Closure temperatures for the Pb/U (∼800°C–850°C) and (U-Th)/He (∼210°C) isotopic systems in zircon bracket acquisition of magnetic remanence, collectively providing a temperature-time history during faulting. Results indicate cooling to ∼200°C in 0.3–0.5 Myr after zircon crystallization, recording time-averaged cooling rates of ∼1000°C–2000°C/Myr. Assuming the footwalls were denuded along single continuous faults, differences in Pb/U and (U-Th)/He zircon ages together with independently determined slip rates allow the distance between the ∼850°C and ∼200°C isotherms along the fault plane to be estimated. Calculated distances are 8.4 ± 4.2 km and 5.0 ± 2.1 km from holes 1275D and 1270D and 8.4 ± 1.4 km at Atlantis Massif. Estimating an initial subsurface fault dip of 50° and a depth of 1.5 km to the 200°C isotherm leads to the prediction that the ∼850°C isotherm lies ∼5–7 km below seafloor at the time of faulting. These depth estimates for active fault systems are consistent with depths of microseismicity observed beneath the hypothesized detachment fault at the TAG hydrothermal field and high-temperature fault rocks recovered from many oceanic detachment faults.
Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology | 2009
Craig B. Grimes; Barbara E. John; Michael J. Cheadle; Frank K. Mazdab; Joseph L. Wooden; Susan M. Swapp; Joshua J. Schwartz
Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology | 2015
Craig B. Grimes; J. L. Wooden; Michael J. Cheadle; Barbara E. John
Contributions to Mineralogy and Petrology | 2011
Craig B. Grimes; Takayuki Ushikubo; Barbara E. John; John W. Valley
Science | 2005
Joshua J. Schwartz; Barbara E. John; Michael J. Cheadle; Elena A. Miranda; Craig B. Grimes; Joseph L. Wooden; Henry J. B. Dick
Earth and Planetary Science Letters | 2009
A. Graham Baines; Michael J. Cheadle; Barbara E. John; Craig B. Grimes; Joshua J. Schwartz; Joseph L. Wooden
Lithos | 2013
Craig B. Grimes; Takayuki Ushikubo; Reinhard Kozdon; John W. Valley