A Comparison of the Noble Gases in Three Meteorite Specimens Labeled Springfield

1976 ◽  
Vol 31 (3-4) ◽  
pp. 293-296
Author(s):  
E. W. Hennecke ◽  
O. K. Manuel

The abundance and isotopic composition of the noble gases were measured in three Spring-field specimens identified by the Denver Museum of Natural History with numbers 7029, 379.13 and 6040. The latter specimen contains more cosmogenic noble gas isotopes than the other two specimens and the abundance pattern of trapped noble gases in specimen 6040 is distinct from that in the other two specimens. Specimen 7029 contains about seven times as much radiogenic 40Ar and about four times as much radiogenic 129Xe as does specimen 379.13. These results indicate that the three specimens did not come from a single meteoroid.

Author(s):  
Chris J Ballentine ◽  
Greg Holland

Study of commercially produced volcanic CO 2 gas associated with the Colorado Plateau, USA, has revealed substantial new information about the noble gas isotopic composition and elemental abundance pattern of the mantle. Combined with published data from mid-ocean ridge basalts, it is now clear that the convecting mantle has a maximum 20 Ne/ 22 Ne isotopic composition, indistinguishable from that attributed to solar wind-implanted (SWI) neon in meteorites. This is distinct from the higher 20 Ne/ 22 Ne isotopic value expected for solar nebula gases. The non-radiogenic xenon isotopic composition of the well gases shows that 20 per cent of the mantle Xe is ‘solar-like’ in origin, but cannot resolve the small isotopic difference between the trapped meteorite ‘Q’-component and solar Xe. The mantle primordial 20 Ne/ 132 Xe is approximately 1400 and is comparable with the upper end of that observed in meteorites. Previous work using the terrestrial 129 I– 129 Xe mass balance demands that almost 99 per cent of the Xe (and therefore other noble gases) has been lost from the accreting solids and that Pu–I closure age models have shown this to have occurred in the first ca 100 Ma of the Earth's history. The highest concentrations of Q-Xe and solar wind-implanted (SWI)-Ne measured in meteorites allow for this loss and these high-abundance samples have a Ne/Xe ratio range compatible with the ‘recycled-air-corrected’ terrestrial mantle. These observations do not support models in which the terrestrial mantle acquired its volatiles from the primary capture of solar nebula gases and, in turn, strongly suggest that the primary terrestrial atmosphere, before isotopic fractionation, is most probably derived from degassed trapped volatiles in accreting material. By contrast, the non-radiogenic argon, krypton and 80 per cent of the xenon in the convecting mantle have the same isotopic composition and elemental abundance pattern as that found in seawater with a small sedimentary Kr and Xe admix. These mantle heavy noble gases are dominated by recycling of air dissolved in seawater back into the mantle. Numerical simulations suggest that plumes sampling the core–mantle boundary would be enriched in seawater-derived noble gases compared with the convecting mantle, and therefore have substantially lower 40 Ar/ 36 Ar. This is compatible with observation. The subduction process is not a complete barrier to volatile return to the mantle.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michaela Flanigan ◽  
Dan Frost ◽  
Tony Withers ◽  
Hans Keppler

<p>Noble gas isotopes have been used to argue that hotspot volcanism taps a deep reservoir in the mantle that has remained largely isolated since the accretion of the Earth.  In order to evaluate the viability of this theory, it is important to understand how noble gases are stored at high pressure, and how processes such as melt separation may influence their transport.  Previous work (eg. Heber et al. 2007) has investigated the partitioning of noble gases in upper mantle minerals (olivine and pyroxenes), but as yet no data are available for other important phases, including garnet and higher-pressure minerals.  This study presents data collected from multi-anvil experiments at 6 GPa and 1700 °C – 1900 °C on artificial basalt compositions similar to those found at ocean island hotspots.  This composition has garnet on the liquidus at these conditions, and we have successfully quenched the melt to a glass.  The partitioning of noble gases between liquidus garnets and co-existing melts has been evaluated using a microprobe and laser ablation mass spectrometry to analyse the gas contents of the two phases.  These results shed light on the behaviour of noble gases in the presence of minerals that have, as yet, not been investigated for their ability to store such volatiles, and on the likelihood of the deep-untapped-reservoir theory.</p>


Author(s):  
Shuai WANG ◽  
Jian KUANG ◽  
Xuelian HUANG ◽  
Hongyan ZHANG ◽  
Min ZHANG ◽  
...  

1995 ◽  
Vol 87 (1) ◽  
pp. 133-143 ◽  
Author(s):  
F. M. Stuart ◽  
P. J. Harrop ◽  
R. Knott ◽  
A. E. Fallick ◽  
G. Turner ◽  
...  

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