Noble Gas Isotope Geochemistry of Mid-Ocean Ridge and Ocean Island Basalts: Characterization of Mantle Source Reservoirs

2002 ◽  
Vol 47 (1) ◽  
pp. 247-317 ◽  
Author(s):  
D. W. Graham
2018 ◽  
Vol 483 ◽  
pp. 595-602 ◽  
Author(s):  
Elsa Amsellem ◽  
Frédéric Moynier ◽  
James M.D. Day ◽  
Manuel Moreira ◽  
Igor S. Puchtel ◽  
...  

1989 ◽  
Vol 26 (5) ◽  
pp. 908-919 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anne Andrew ◽  
Colin I. Godwin

Lead-isotope whole-rock ratios of the Triassic flood basalts of the Karmutsen Formation are heterogeneous, with 206Pb/2MPb = 18.72–21.51, 207Pb/204Pb = 15.56–15.77, and 208Pb/204Pb = 38.16–40.15. Whole-rock lead initial ratios are coincident with galena analyses having 206Pb/204Pb = 18.1–19.0, 207Pb/204Pb = 15.53–15.60, and 208Pb/204Pb = 38.2–38.6. Lead, uranium, and thorium concentrations are greater than for mid-ocean-ridge basalts, less than for island arcs, but similar to those in ocean-island and continental flood basalts. Isotopic similarities exist between the Columbia River – Chilcotin continental flood basalts and the Karmutsen Formation, suggesting similar origins for these basalts. The heterogeneity in whole-rock ratios can be explained in terms of isotopic mixing between a lead-rich average crustal lead type and an ocean-island basalt-type mantle source. Thus the Karmutsen Formation displays evidence for sediment contamination of the mantle.


2017 ◽  
Vol 17 (2) ◽  
pp. 269
Author(s):  
Ana Paula De Oliveira Dani ◽  
Marcus Vinicius Dornelles Remus ◽  
Norberto Dani ◽  
Evandro Fernandes de Lima

Magmatismo associado com o estágio pré-evaporítico da Bacia de Campos foi estudado a partir de testemunhos de quatro furos de sondagens. Os dados levantados são importantes no contexto da evolução tectônica e estratigráfica da bacia. O objetivo deste trabalho foi a caracterização dessas rochas a partir da petrografia, litoquímica, química mineral e composição isotópica Sr-Nd. A aplicação das metodologias de estudo convencionais foi dificultada devido ao grau de alteração das rochas, marcado por modificações mineralógicas (substituição de minerais por argilominerais, palagonitização do vidro vulcânico, sericitização dos plagioclásios e presença de vesículas), ao elevado valor de perda ao fogo (LOI) e à identificação de sedimentos arenosos englobados pela rocha vulcânica. Para minimizar os efeitos da alteração, empregaram-se metodologias que permitiram avaliar o grau de alteração das amostras e a mobilidade dos elementos químicos na rocha total. Os resultados obtidos estabelecem que as rochas vulcânicas são basaltos originados a partir de magmas com composição subalcalina, toleítica a transicional, baixo TiO2 e alto magnésio. Os elementos terras raras (ETR) e o padrão de distribuição dos elementos traço estão em conformidade com o padrão dos basaltos toleíticos baixo TiO2 da Formação Serra Geral e são diferentes dos enriched-mid ocean ridge basalt (E-MORB) e dos ocean island basalts (OIB) do oceano Atlântico, embora alguns elementos tenham comportamento similar. O piroxênio dominante é a augita e, quimicamente, confirma que os basaltos pertencem à série subalcalina, bem como ao intervalo de transição entre as séries cálcio-alcalina e toleítica. Isotopicamente, as amostras estudadas incidem fora do campo estabelecido como “mantle array”; e seguem o comportamento dos basaltos da Bacia de Campos com alto potássio. Os parâmetros levantados estabelecem a correlação das rochas vulcânicas do Andar Alagoas da Bacia de Campos com os basaltos intracontinentais da Bacia do Paraná.


2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Frances M. Deegan ◽  
Martin J. Whitehouse ◽  
Valentin R. Troll ◽  
Harri Geiger ◽  
Heejin Jeon ◽  
...  

AbstractMagma plumbing systems underlying subduction zone volcanoes extend from the mantle through the overlying crust and facilitate protracted fractional crystallisation, assimilation, and mixing, which frequently obscures a clear view of mantle source compositions. In order to see through this crustal noise, we present intracrystal Secondary Ion Mass Spectrometry (SIMS) δ18O values in clinopyroxene from Merapi, Kelut, Batur, and Agung volcanoes in the Sunda arc, Indonesia, under which the thickness of the crust decreases from ca. 30 km at Merapi to ≤20 km at Agung. Here we show that mean clinopyroxene δ18O values decrease concomitantly with crustal thickness and that lavas from Agung possess mantle-like He-Sr-Nd-Pb isotope ratios and clinopyroxene mean equilibrium melt δ18O values of 5.7 ‰ (±0.2 1 SD) indistinguishable from the δ18O range for Mid Ocean Ridge Basalt (MORB). The oxygen isotope composition of the mantle underlying the East Sunda Arc is therefore largely unaffected by subduction-driven metasomatism and may thus represent a sediment-poor arc end-member.


A systematic survey of rare-earth (r.e.) abundances in submarine tholeiitic basalts along mid-oceanic ridges has been made by neutron activation analysis. The r.e. fractionation patterns are remarkably uniform along each mid-oceanic ridge and from one ridge to another (Juan de Fuca Ridge, East Pacific and Chile Rise, Pacific-Antarctic, Mid-Indian and Carlsberg Ridge, Gulf of Aden, Red Sea Trough and Reykjanes Ridge). The patterns are all depleted in light r.e. except for three samples (Gulf of Aden and Mid-Indian Ridge) which are unfractionated relative to chondrites. They contrast markedly with tholeiitic plateau basalt which are shown to be related to the early volcanic phases associated with continental drift. Tholeiitic plateau basalts are light r.e. enriched as are most continental rocks. Mid-ocean ridge basalts are also distinguishable from spatially related oceanic shield volcanoes of tholeiitic composition (Red Sea Trough-Jebel Teir Is., East Pacific Rise-Culpepper Island). Thus on a r.e. basis there are tholeiites within tholeiites. The r.e. difference between mid-ocean ridge tholeiites and tholeiitic plateau basalts can be related to distinct thermal and tectonic régimes and consequently magmatic modes and rates of intrusions from the low velocity layer in the upper mantle. The difference between continental and oceanic volcanism appears to be triggered by: (1) presence or absence of a moving continental lithosphere over the low velocity layer, and (2) whether or not major rifts tap the low velocity layer through the lithosphere. Fractional crystallization during ascent of melts before eruption at the ridge crest does not affect appreciably the relative r.e. patterns. R.e. in mid-ocean ridge basalts appear to intrinsically reflect their distribution in the upper mantle source, i.e. the low velocity layer. Based on secondary order r.e. variation of mid-ocean ridge basalts: (1) If fractional crystallization is invoked for the small r.e. variations, up to approximately 50 % extraction of olivine and Ca-poor orthopyroxene in various combinations can be tolerated. However, only limited amount of plagioclase or Ca-rich clinopyroxene can be extracted, the former because of its effect on the abundance of Eu abundance and the latter because of its effect on the [La/Sm] e.f. ratio, alternatively. (2) If partial melting during ascent is invoked, and a minimum of 10% melting is assumed, the permissible degree of melting of originally a lherzolite upper mantle may vary between 10 and 30% . It is not possible to establish readily to what extent these two processes have been operative as they cannot be distinguished on the basis of r.e. data only. However, there is evidence indicating that both have been operative and are responsible for the small r.e. variations observed in mid-ocean ridge basalts. An attempt to correlate second order r.e. variations along or across mid-oceanic ridges with spreading rate, age, or distance from ridge crests has been made but the results are inconclusive. No r.e. secular variation of the oceanic crust is apparent. R.e. average ridge to ridge variations are attributed to small lateral inhomogeneities of the source of basalts in the low velocity layer, and to a certain extent, to its past history. The remarkable r.e. uniformity of mid-oceanic ridge tholeiites requires a unique and simple volcanic process to be operative. It calls for upward migration of melt or slush from a relatively homogeneous source in the mantle—the low velocity layer, followed by further partial melting during ascent. The model, although consistent with geophysics, may have to be reconciled with some evidence from experimental petrology. Models for r.e. composition of the upper mantle source of ridge basalt, formation of layers 2 and 3, and the moho-discontinuity, are also presented.


2020 ◽  
Vol 117 (25) ◽  
pp. 13997-14004 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael W. Broadley ◽  
Peter H. Barry ◽  
David V. Bekaert ◽  
David J. Byrne ◽  
Antonio Caracausi ◽  
...  

Identifying the origin of noble gases in Earth’s mantle can provide crucial constraints on the source and timing of volatile (C, N, H2O, noble gases, etc.) delivery to Earth. It remains unclear whether the early Earth was able to directly capture and retain volatiles throughout accretion or whether it accreted anhydrously and subsequently acquired volatiles through later additions of chondritic material. Here, we report high-precision noble gas isotopic data from volcanic gases emanating from, in and around, the Yellowstone caldera (Wyoming, United States). We show that the He and Ne isotopic and elemental signatures of the Yellowstone gas requires an input from an undegassed mantle plume. Coupled with the distinct ratio of129Xe to primordial Xe isotopes in Yellowstone compared with mid-ocean ridge basalt (MORB) samples, this confirms that the deep plume and shallow MORB mantles have remained distinct from one another for the majority of Earth’s history. Krypton and xenon isotopes in the Yellowstone mantle plume are found to be chondritic in origin, similar to the MORB source mantle. This is in contrast with the origin of neon in the mantle, which exhibits an isotopic dichotomy between solar plume and chondritic MORB mantle sources. The co-occurrence of solar and chondritic noble gases in the deep mantle is thought to reflect the heterogeneous nature of Earth’s volatile accretion during the lifetime of the protosolar nebula. It notably implies that the Earth was able to retain its chondritic volatiles since its earliest stages of accretion, and not only through late additions.


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