Middle-crust accumulation of hornblendite and pyroxenes from slab- and mantle wedge-derived magmas and recharge of high-18O felsic magma collectively generated the Hadanxun arc magmas, northern East Junggar

Lithos ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 386-387 ◽  
pp. 105986
Author(s):  
Wei Liu ◽  
Cuiqin Si ◽  
Xiujin Liu
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Matthew Thomas Stevens

<p>The Coromandel Volcanic Zone (CVZ) was the longest-lived area of volcanism in New Zealand hosting the commencement of large explosive rhyolitic and ignimbrite forming eruptions. The NW trending Coromandel Peninsula is the subaerial remnant of the Miocene-Pliocene CVZ, which is regarded as a tectonic precursor to the Taupo Volcanic Zone (TVZ), currently the most dynamic and voluminous rhyolitic volcanic centre on Earth. This study presents new single glass shard major and trace element geochemical analyses for 72 high-silica volcanic tephra layers recovered from well-dated deep-sea sediments of the SW Pacific Ocean by the Ocean Drilling Program (ODP) Leg 181. ODP Site 1124, ~720 km south and east from the CVZ, penetrated sediments of the Rekohu Drift yielding an unprecedented record of major explosive volcanic eruptions owing to the favourable location and preservation characteristics at this site. This record extends onshore eruptive sequences of CVZ explosive volcanism that are obscured by poor exposure, alteration, and erosion and burial by younger volcanic deposits. Tephra layers recovered from Site 1124 are well-dated through a combination of biostratigraphic and palaeomagnetic methods allowing the temporal geochemical evolution of the CVZ to be reconstructed in relation to changes in the petrogenesis of CVZ arc magmas from ~ 10 to 2 Ma. This thesis establishes major and trace element geochemical "fingerprints" for all Site 1124-C tephras using well-established (wavelength dispersive electron probe microanalysis) and new (laser ablation inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry) in situ single glass shard microanalytical techniques. Trace element analysis of Site 1124-C glass shards (as small as 20 um) demonstrate that trace element signatures offer a more specific, unequivocal characterisation for distinguishing (and potentially correlating) between tephras with nearly identical major element compositions. The Site 1124-C core contains 72 unaltered Miocene-Pliocene volcanic glass-shard-bearing laminae > 1 cm thick that correspond to 83 or 84 geochemical eruptive units. Revised eruptive frequencies based on the number of geochemical eruptive units identified represent at least one eruption every 99 kyr for the late Miocene and one per 74 kyr for the Pliocene. The frequency of tephra deposition throughout the history of the CVZ has not been constant, rather reflecting pulses of major explosive eruptions resulting in closely clustered groups of tephra separated by periods of reduced activity, relative volcanic quiescence or non-tephra deposition. As more regular activity became prevalent in the Pliocene, it was accompanied by more silicic magma compositions. Rhyolitic volcanic glass shards are characterised by predominantly calc-alkaline and minor high-K enriched major element compositions. Major element compositional variability of the tephras deposited between 10 Ma and 2 Ma reveals magma batches with pre-eruptive compositional gradients implying a broad control by fractional crystallisation. Trace element characterisation of glass shards reveals the role of magmatic processes that are not readily apparent in the relatively homogeneous major element compositions. Multi-element diagrams show prominent negative Sr and Ti anomalies against primitive mantle likely caused by various degrees of plagioclase and titanomagnetite fractional crystallisation in shallow magma chambers. Relative Nb depletion, characteristic of arc volcanism, is moderate in CVZ tephras. HFSEs (e.g. Nb, Zr, Ti) and HREEs (e.g. Yb, Lu) remain immobile during slab fluid flux suggesting they are derived from the mantle wedge. LILE (e.g. Rb, Cs, Ba, Sr) and LREE (e.g. La, Ce) enrichments are consistent with slab fluid contribution. B/La and Li/Y ratios can be used as a proxy for the flux of subducting material to the mantle wedge, they suggest there is a strong influence from this component in the generation of CVZ arc magmas, potentially inducing melting. CVZ tephra show long-term coherent variability in trace element geochemistry. Post ~ 4 Ma tephras display a more consistent, less variable, chemical fingerprint that persists up to and across the CVZ/TVZ transition at ~ 2 Ma. Initiation of TVZ volcanism may have occurred earlier than is presently considered, or CVZ to TVZ volcanism may have occurred without significant changes in magma generation processes.</p>


Destructive plate margin magmas may be subdivided into two groups on the basis of their rare earth element (REE) ratios. Most island arc suites have low Ce/Yb, and remarkably restricted isotope ratios of 87 Sr/ 86 Sr = 0.7033, 143 Nd/ 144 Nd = 0.51302, 206 Pb/ 204 Pb = 18.76 , 207 Pb/ 204 Pb = 15.57, and 208 Pb/ 204 Pb = 38.4. However, they also have Rb/Sr (0.03), Th/U (2.2) and Ce/Yb (8.5) ratios which are significantly less than accepted estimates for the bulk continental crust. The high Ce/Yb suites have higher incompatible element contents, more restricted heavy REE, and much more variable isotope ratios. Such rocks are found in the Aeolian Islands, Grenada, Indonesia and Philippines, and their isotope and trace element features have been attributed both to contributions from subducted sediment, and/or old trace element enriched material in the mantle wedge. It is argued that for isotope and trace element models the slab component can usefully be taken to consist of subducted sediment and altered mid-ocean ridge basalts, since these may contain ca. 80% of the water in the subducted slab, and the distinctive trace element features of arc magmas are generally attributed to the movement of material in hydrous fluids. The isotope data indicate that not more than 15% of the Sr and Th in an average arc magma were derived from subducted material, and that the rest were derived from the mantle wedge. The fluxes of elements which cannot be characterized isotopically are more difficult to constrain, but for most minor and trace elements the slab derived contribution in arc magmas is too small to have a noticeable effect on the residual slab.


2019 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
F. Piccoli ◽  
J. Hermann ◽  
T. Pettke ◽  
J. A. D. Connolly ◽  
E. D. Kempf ◽  
...  

AbstractThe observation that primitive arc magmas are more oxidized than mid-ocean-ridge basalts has led to the paradigm that slab-derived fluids carry SO2 and CO2 that metasomatize and oxidize the sub-arc mantle wedge. We combine petrography and thermodynamic modelling to quantify the oxygen fugacity (fO2) and speciation of the fluids generated by serpentinite dehydration during subduction. Silicate-magnetite assemblages maintain fO2 conditions similar to the quartz-fayalite-magnetite (QFM) buffer at fore-arc conditions. Sulphides are stable under such conditions and aqueous fluids contain minor S. At sub-arc depth, dehydration occurs under more reducing conditions producing aqueous fluids carrying H2S. This finding brings into question current models in which serpentinite-derived fluids are the cause of oxidized arc magmatism and has major implications for the global volatile cycle, as well as for redox processes controlling subduction zone geodynamics.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
◽  
Matthew Thomas Stevens

<p>The Coromandel Volcanic Zone (CVZ) was the longest-lived area of volcanism in New Zealand hosting the commencement of large explosive rhyolitic and ignimbrite forming eruptions. The NW trending Coromandel Peninsula is the subaerial remnant of the Miocene-Pliocene CVZ, which is regarded as a tectonic precursor to the Taupo Volcanic Zone (TVZ), currently the most dynamic and voluminous rhyolitic volcanic centre on Earth. This study presents new single glass shard major and trace element geochemical analyses for 72 high-silica volcanic tephra layers recovered from well-dated deep-sea sediments of the SW Pacific Ocean by the Ocean Drilling Program (ODP) Leg 181. ODP Site 1124, ~720 km south and east from the CVZ, penetrated sediments of the Rekohu Drift yielding an unprecedented record of major explosive volcanic eruptions owing to the favourable location and preservation characteristics at this site. This record extends onshore eruptive sequences of CVZ explosive volcanism that are obscured by poor exposure, alteration, and erosion and burial by younger volcanic deposits. Tephra layers recovered from Site 1124 are well-dated through a combination of biostratigraphic and palaeomagnetic methods allowing the temporal geochemical evolution of the CVZ to be reconstructed in relation to changes in the petrogenesis of CVZ arc magmas from ~ 10 to 2 Ma. This thesis establishes major and trace element geochemical "fingerprints" for all Site 1124-C tephras using well-established (wavelength dispersive electron probe microanalysis) and new (laser ablation inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry) in situ single glass shard microanalytical techniques. Trace element analysis of Site 1124-C glass shards (as small as 20 um) demonstrate that trace element signatures offer a more specific, unequivocal characterisation for distinguishing (and potentially correlating) between tephras with nearly identical major element compositions. The Site 1124-C core contains 72 unaltered Miocene-Pliocene volcanic glass-shard-bearing laminae > 1 cm thick that correspond to 83 or 84 geochemical eruptive units. Revised eruptive frequencies based on the number of geochemical eruptive units identified represent at least one eruption every 99 kyr for the late Miocene and one per 74 kyr for the Pliocene. The frequency of tephra deposition throughout the history of the CVZ has not been constant, rather reflecting pulses of major explosive eruptions resulting in closely clustered groups of tephra separated by periods of reduced activity, relative volcanic quiescence or non-tephra deposition. As more regular activity became prevalent in the Pliocene, it was accompanied by more silicic magma compositions. Rhyolitic volcanic glass shards are characterised by predominantly calc-alkaline and minor high-K enriched major element compositions. Major element compositional variability of the tephras deposited between 10 Ma and 2 Ma reveals magma batches with pre-eruptive compositional gradients implying a broad control by fractional crystallisation. Trace element characterisation of glass shards reveals the role of magmatic processes that are not readily apparent in the relatively homogeneous major element compositions. Multi-element diagrams show prominent negative Sr and Ti anomalies against primitive mantle likely caused by various degrees of plagioclase and titanomagnetite fractional crystallisation in shallow magma chambers. Relative Nb depletion, characteristic of arc volcanism, is moderate in CVZ tephras. HFSEs (e.g. Nb, Zr, Ti) and HREEs (e.g. Yb, Lu) remain immobile during slab fluid flux suggesting they are derived from the mantle wedge. LILE (e.g. Rb, Cs, Ba, Sr) and LREE (e.g. La, Ce) enrichments are consistent with slab fluid contribution. B/La and Li/Y ratios can be used as a proxy for the flux of subducting material to the mantle wedge, they suggest there is a strong influence from this component in the generation of CVZ arc magmas, potentially inducing melting. CVZ tephra show long-term coherent variability in trace element geochemistry. Post ~ 4 Ma tephras display a more consistent, less variable, chemical fingerprint that persists up to and across the CVZ/TVZ transition at ~ 2 Ma. Initiation of TVZ volcanism may have occurred earlier than is presently considered, or CVZ to TVZ volcanism may have occurred without significant changes in magma generation processes.</p>


Elements ◽  
2021 ◽  
Vol 17 (1) ◽  
pp. 35-40 ◽  
Author(s):  
Othmar Müntener ◽  
Peter Ulmer ◽  
Jonathan D. Blundy

Magmatic rocks in the Alps are scarce. What little arc magmatism there was pre-dates the Eurasia–Adria collision at 43–34 Ma but ends at 30–29 Ma. Conversely, geochemical data for magmatic rocks from the Alps resemble that of subduction-related magmatic arcs. A characteristic of Alpine magmatism is the occurrence of relatively deep (80–100 km) super-hydrous (&gt;8 wt% H2O) low-K primary magmas in the east and shoshonitic K-rich magmas in the west. These features are likely related to the absence of vigorous mantle wedge convection. Superhydrous primary magmas undergo extensive crystallization and fluid saturation at depth, producing high ratios of plutonic to volcanic rocks. We speculate that superhydrous primary arc magmas are a consequence of slow convergence and the initial architecture of subducting crust.


Arc magmas generated at depths near 100 km by dehydration of subducting slabs are olivine-rich melabasalts, but the magmas that reach the surface in mature continental magmatic arcs have an average composition near that of rhyodacite. Depth-varying fractionations and equilibrations profoundly modify the initial magmas. Plate tectonics has operated throughout Proterozoic and Phanerozoic time much as it does now, and so many deeply eroded terrains must expose products of arc magmatism. Most exposed middle and deep continental crust consists of igneous rocks plus older rocks equilibrated at magmatic temperatures, variably deformed and metamorphosed subsequently; each crustal level displays a typical assemblage of magmatic rock types, which are here deduced to be products mostly of arc magmatism. Pre-arc mantle consists of depleted dunite and harzburgite. Rising arc magmas precipitate much additional olivine, and add the equivalent of 10 or 15% of basalt in clinopyroxene, orthopyroxene, garnet and spinel. The seismic M. discontinuity may be controlled primarily by the shallow limit of the depth zone in which crystallization is mostly of ultramafic components, and the fractionated magmas that reach the crust are mostly of gabbroic to granodioritic compositions. The lower crust is characterized by differentiated layered complexes, which often contain mafic or ultramafic basal cumulates, medial floated-plagioclase anorthosite, and upper quartz-poor pyroxene—mesoperthite granites, and by other magmatic rocks. Magmatic rocks are more voluminous than pre-existing rocks. Supracrustal rocks are in middle granulite facies, and much granitic material has been melted from them by magmatic heat. The magmatically modified middle crust consists primarily of migmatites in lower granulite facies in the deeper part, and upper amphibolite facies in the shallower part. Much dissociation of hydrous mineral assemblages is caused by the magmatic heat, producing water-rich, aluminous magmas, assimilation and anatexis. The high water contents restrict rise of the equilibrated magmas; voluminous pegmatites are expelled into the wall rocks, and crystallization is forced. Sheets of two-mica granites characterize the upper part of the middle crust. The comparatively dry magmas that rise into the upper crust are mostly tonalite to adamellite. These magmas spread out in steep-sided batholiths above the migmatites, erupt as ash flow sheets from calderas, and produce voluminous far-travelling volcanic ash. Inverted metamorphic gradients and outward-verging structures are produced beneath the spreading batholiths. Magmatic arcs are extensional at all crustal levels.


2021 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anton Kutyrev ◽  
Michael Zelenski ◽  
Nikolai Nekrylov ◽  
Dmitry Savelyev ◽  
Alkiviadis Kontonikas-Charos ◽  
...  

Platinum-group elements (PGE) and gold are a promising tool to assess the processes of mantle melting beneath the subduction zones. However, fractionation processes in magmas inevitably overwrite the initial metal budgets of magmas, making constraints on the melting processes inconclusive. Moreover, little is still known about the geochemical behavior of a particular metal in a single arc magmatic system, from mantle melting towards magma solidification. Here we compare noble metals in lavas from several eruptions of the Tolbachik volcano (Kamchatka arc) to better understand the effects of magma differentiation, estimate primary melt compositions and make constraints on the mantle melting. We show that Ir, Ru, Rh and, to a lesser extent, Pt are compatible during magmatic differentiation. The pronounced incompatible behavior of Cu and Pd, observed in Tolbachik magmas, rules out the significant influence of sulfide melts on the early magmatic evolution in this particular case. Gold is also incompatible during magmatic differentiation; however, its systematics can be affected by the inferred gold recycling in the plumbing system of Tolbachik. Although the Tolbachik lavas show only slightly higher PGE fractionation than in MORB, a notable negative Ru anomaly (higher Pt/Ru and Ir/Ru) is observed. We attribute this to be a result of greater oxidation in the subarc mantle (by 1–4 log units), which promotes crystallization of Ru-bearing phases such as Fe3+-rich Cr-spinel and laurite. The estimated Pd contents for the parental melt of the Tolbachik lavas approaches 6.5 ppb. This is several times higher than reported MORB values (1.5 ± 0.5 ppb), suggesting the enrichment of Pd in the mantle wedge. Our results highlight the influence of the subduction-related processes and mantle wedge refertilization on the noble metal budgets of arc magmas.


2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Calvin G. Barnes ◽  
◽  
Melanie A. Barnes ◽  
Charlotte M. Allen

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