4.0 Article

Baguio Mineral District: An oceanic arc witness to the geological evolution of northern Luzon, Philippines

Journal

ISLAND ARC
Volume 17, Issue 4, Pages 432-442

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/j.1440-1738.2008.00635.x

Keywords

crustal thickness; island arc; marginal basin; mineralization; Philippines; subduction

Funding

  1. University of the Philippines
  2. National Institute of Geological Sciences (UP-NIGS)

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The Baguio Mineral District exposes rock formations that evince the geological and tectonic evolution of this district from a subduction-related marginal basin to an island arc setting. Available onshore and offshore data are consistent with an Early (onset phase) to Middle (developed phase) Miocene arc polarity reversal from the east (termination of subduction along the proto-East Luzon Trough) to the west (initiation of subduction along the Manila Trench). Geophysical modeling and geochemical data calculation showed a 30 +/- 5 km crustal thickness for the mineral district. Subduction-related multiple arc magmatism and ophiolite accretion contributed to crustal thickening. Recent information on the Oligo-Miocene Zigzag and Klondyke formations in the mineral district reveal that the marginal basin, where these rocks were deposited, has received eroded materials from adjacent terrains characterized by siliceous lithologies. Furthermore, adakitic rocks, high permeable zones and extensional zones which are exploration markers applied to identify possible mineralization targets, are prevalent in the mineral district. The geological evolution that the district had undergone mimics the evolution of island arcs worldwide in general and northern Luzon in particular.

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