THE GEOCHEMICAL EVOLUTION OF GREATER THAN 100 MILLION YEARS OF SUBDUCTION-RELATED MAGMATISM, COAST PLUTONIC COMPLEX, WEST-CENTRAL BRITISH COLUMBIA
Major and trace elemental, and various isotopic compositions indicate that the Coast Mountains batholith is comprised of relatively primitive calc-alkaline intrusives that are similar to the western or outboard portions of other batholithic segments of the North American Cordillera. Elevated oxygen isotopic compositions, however, indicate a period of near surface residence for the rocks comprising the source(s) of the batholith. The depth of melting, as indicated by rare earth elemental compositions, suggest relatively shallow levels (i.e. ≤ 40 km) during the Jurassic and Early Cretaceous and east of the Coast Shear zone only during the Late Cretaceous. Melts generated at crustal depths in excess of 40 km dominate for Late Cretaceous intrusives west of the Coast Shear zone and during the Paleocene and Eocene east of this structure. Periods of melt generation from deep crustal sources correlate well with known periods of early Late Cretaceous and latest Late Cretaceous-Paleocene contraction. Dehydration melting appears most prevalent for Jurassic through Late Cretaceous plutonic rocks west of the Coast Shear zone, but may also be responsible for Late Cretaceous and Paleocene melts to the east.