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Phanerozoic Large Igneous Provinces

A Comparative Approach

  • 1st Edition - October 1, 2026
  • Latest edition
  • Editors: Gregory Shellnutt, Steve Denyszyn
  • Language: English

Phanerozoic Large Igneous Provinces: A Comparative Approach offers a comprehensive exploration of the intricacies of large igneous provinces (LIPs) by adopting a multid… Read more

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Description

Phanerozoic Large Igneous Provinces: A Comparative Approach offers a comprehensive exploration of the intricacies of large igneous provinces (LIPs) by adopting a multidisciplinary approach that unravels the geological, thermal, and biological repercussions of LIP formation. The rapid emplacement of these provinces, often associated with continental break-up, mineral deposits, and mass extinctions remains a subject of intense debate. This book presents an accessible, yet detailed, analysis of several Phanerozoic LIPs, strategically selected for their scientific significance, and arranged chronologically. It provides a foundational reference for LIPs, utilizing a chapter-wide template to facilitate comparisons of crucial aspects and processes.

Users will find comprehensive knowledge on over 20 important LIPs, including historical context and uniqueness, geological background, physical characteristics and formations, age and geochronology, mineralogy, and synthesis.

Key features

  • Provides a foundational reference for LIPs, including perspectives on geological, thermal, and biological impacts of their formation
  • Presents LIPs that have been carefully selected and planned due to their scientific significance, and in order of age
  • Uses a consistent template across the book that allows chapter by chapter comparisons so that readers can easily compare key elements between different LIPs

Readership

Researchers, professors, mineral exploration geologists, and graduate and undergraduate students in Earth sciences including Geology, Geochronology, Planetary Science, Geochemistry, Earth Surface Processes and Rock Mechanics.

Table of contents

1. Introduction

2. Central Iapetus Large Igneous Province

3. Kalkarindji flood basalts

4. Viluy Flood Basalts

5. Northern Appalachians Late Silurian-Early Devonian LIP

6. Maritimes Basin Basalts

7. Oslo Graben flood basalts

8. Panjal Traps

9. Tarim Large Igneous Province

10. Emeishan Large Igneous Province

11. Siberian Traps

12. Central Atlantic Magmatic Province

13. Karoo-Ferrar Large Igneous Province

14. Parana-Etendeka Large Igneous Province

15. Ontong-Java Oceanic Plateau

16. Kerguelen Oceanic Plateau

17. Rajmahal Traps

18. High Arctic Large Igneous Province

19. Caribbean Plateau

20. Late Cretaceous Madagascar flood basalts

21. Deccan Traps

22. North Atlantic Tertiary Province

23. Northern Cordillera Late Paleocene-Early Eocene LIP

24. Ethiopian Traps

25. Columbia River flood basalts

26. Conclusions

Product details

  • Edition: 1
  • Latest edition
  • Published: October 1, 2026
  • Language: English

About the editors

GS

Gregory Shellnutt

J. Gregory Shellnutt is a Professor in the Department of Earth Sciences, National Taiwan Normal University. His research focuses on the geochemistry and geochronology of magmatic rocks from large igneous provinces, Precambrian mafic dyke swarms, the Central African Orogenic Belt, and the Appalachian Orogeny. He was awarded Young Scientist awards from the Mineralogical Association of Canada and Academia Sinica, the Ministry of Science and Technology (Taiwan) Outstanding Research Award in 2015 and 2022, and the Ma Ting Ying and Wang Hanzhuo awards from the Geological Society of Taiwan. Greg is currently the Co-Editor-in Chief of Lithos, Associate Editor of Journal of the Geological Society of India, and editorial board member of Scientific Reports and Frontiers in Earth Sciences.

Affiliations and expertise
Professor, Department of Earth Sciences National, Taiwan Normal University, Taiwan

SD

Steve Denyszyn

Steven W. Denyszyn is an Assistant Professor with the Department of Earth Sciences at Memorial University of Newfoundland, Canada. Previous affiliations include the University of Toronto, the Berkeley Geochronology Center, and the University of Western Australia. He primarily uses high-precision U-Pb geochronology to study the timing and rates of igneous processes, particularly large igneous provinces and magmatic ore deposits, as well as mass extinctions, paleocontinental reconstructions, and tectonics.

Affiliations and expertise
Assistant Professor, Department of Earth Sciences, Memorial University of Newfoundland, Canada