97 research outputs found

    Distribution of Fe3+ and H in Minerals During Partial Melting and Metasomatism of Spinel Peridotite

    Get PDF
    Oxygen fugacity and water content are crucial parameters for many chemical and physical properties of the Earth's mantle, for example bearing on fluid type, melting initiation, and deformation. However, the exact behaviour of Fe3+ and H during melting and metasomatism is still under debate. Here, the Fe3+/Fe ratio (Mssbauer and EMP) and water content (FTIR) of peridotite minerals are examined in mantle xenoliths from Kilbourne Hole (KH), NM, and Dish Hill (DH), CA (USA). These spinel peridotites have compositions consistent with partial melting with variable degrees of metasomatism (undetectable to cryptic to modal). Pyroxenites also allow to examine melt-rock reactions. Bulk-rock Fe2O3 content of the KH peridotites correlates with indices of melting (positive with bulk-rock Al2O3 and Cpx Yb contents, and negative with spinel Cr#) confirming that Fe3+ behaves as an incompatible element during melting. Correlations of the Fe3+/Fe ratio of minerals with these indices, however, indicates that Fe3+ is incompatible in Cpx but compatible in Opx and spinel during melting. Water contents in olivine, Cpx and Opx from most KH peridotites can be explained by partial melting and correlate negatively with the Fe3+/Fe ratio of spinel and Opx but positively with that of Cpx. This indicates partial control of Fe3+ on the incorporation of H in pyroxene, but not related to a redox equilibrium in Cpx. The higher Fe3+/Fe ratio of spinel in the metasomatized KH and DH peridotites, and in the pyroxenites confirms that oxidation characterizes modal metasomatism. Metasomatism, however, is not necessarily accompanied by water addition

    Magnesium isotope evidence that accretional vapour loss shapes planetary compositions

    Get PDF
    It has long been recognized that Earth and other differentiated planetary bodies are chemically fractionated compared to primitive, chondritic meteorites and, by inference, the primordial disk from which they formed. However, it is not known whether the notable volatile depletions of planetary bodies are a consequence of accretion1 or inherited from prior nebular fractionation2. The isotopic compositions of the main constituents of planetary bodies can contribute to this debate3, 4, 5, 6. Here we develop an analytical approach that corrects a major cause of measurement inaccuracy inherent in conventional methods, and show that all differentiated bodies have isotopically heavier magnesium compositions than chondritic meteorites. We argue that possible magnesium isotope fractionation during condensation of the solar nebula, core formation and silicate differentiation cannot explain these observations. However, isotopic fractionation between liquid and vapour, followed by vapour escape during accretionary growth of planetesimals, generates appropriate residual compositions. Our modelling implies that the isotopic compositions of magnesium, silicon and iron, and the relative abundances of the major elements of Earth and other planetary bodies, are a natural consequence of substantial (about 40 per cent by mass) vapour loss from growing planetesimals by this mechanism

    Matthew Arnold and Richard Cobden in 1864: Some Recently Discovered Letters

    No full text

    The sands at Southport

    No full text
    'THE SANDS AT SOUTHPORT. W. H. Bartlett. J. C. Armytage London; Published for the Proprietors, by Geo: Virtue, 26, Ivy Lane, 1810.
    • …
    corecore