17 research outputs found

    Geochemistry of deep Manihiki Plateau crust: Implications for compositional diversity of large igneous provinces in the Western Pacific and their genetic link

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    Highlights • First data on the composition of deep crust and primitive rocks of high-Ti magmatic series of Manihiki Plateau • High potential mantle temperature for Manihiki sources (>1460oC) suggests a lower mantle plume origin • EM1 signature in high-Ti Manihiki basalts could originate from recycled lower continental crust or re-fertilized SCLM • The presence of refractory mantle in the Manihiki plume explains 30% lower crustal thickness compared to OJP • Manihiki and OJP could have been formed from a geochemically zoned plume or from two spatially separated mantle plumes Abstract Geochemical studies revealed two major (high- and low-Ti) magmatic series composing the Manihiki Plateau in the Western Pacific. Here we report new geochemical data (major and trace element and Sr-Nd-Pb isotope compositions) of the Manihiki rocks. The rocks belong to the previously rarely sampled high-Ti Manihiki series and represent a section of deep crust of the plateau. The rocks were collected by remotely operated vehicle ROV Kiel 6000 during R/V SONNE SO225 expedition from a tectonic block at a stretched and faulted boundary between the Northern and Western Manihiki sub-plateaus. Additional data is presented on samples obtained by dredging during the same cruise. Judging from the age of stratigraphically higher lavas, most samples must be ≥125 Ma old. They comprise fully crystalline microdolerites, aphyric and Ol-Px-Pl-phyric basalts and breccias metamorphosed under greenschist to amphibolite facies with peak metamorphic temperatures of 636–677 °C and pressures of 2.0–2.7 kbar. A single sample of hornblende gabbro was also recovered and likely represents a late stage intrusion. Despite strong metamorphism, the samples from the ROV profile reveal only minor to moderate chemical alteration and their initial compositions are well preserved. The rocks are relatively primitive with MgO up to 13 wt%, range from enriched to depleted in LREE (LaN/SmN = 0.7–1.1), exhibit variable but mostly depleted Nb contents (Nb/Nb* = 0.8–1.3) and display only a narrow range in isotope compositions with strong EM1 characteristics (εNd (t) = 1.8–3.6, 206Pb/204Pb (t) = 17.9–18.1, 207Pb/204Pb (t) = 15.49–15.53, 208Pb/204Pb (t) = 38.08–38.42). The parental magmas are interpreted to originate from a thermochemical plume with a potential mantle temperature >1460 °C. The trace element and isotope EM1 signature of the high-Ti rocks reflects the presence of recycled lower continental crust material or re-fertilized subcontinental lithospheric mantle in the plume source. A highly refractory mantle was the primary source of the low-Ti basalts and could also contribute to the origin of high-Ti basalts. On average a more depleted mantle source for the Manihiki rocks can explain ~30% lower crustal thickness of this plateau compared to Ontong Java Plateau, which was mainly formed by melting of similarly hot but more fertile mantle. The presently available data suggest that the sources of Ontong Java and Manihiki Plateaus were compositionally different and could represent two large domains of a single plume or two contemporaneous but separate plumes

    Boninite-like intraplate magmas from Manihiki Plateau Require Ultra-depleted and Enriched Source Components

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    The Ontong Java and Manihiki oceanic plateaus are believed to have formed through high-degree melting of a mantle plume head. Boninite-like, low-Ti basement rocks at Manihiki, however, imply a more complex magma genesis compared with Ontong Java basement lavas that can be generated by ∼30% melting of a primitive mantle source. Here we show that the trace element and isotope compositions of low-Ti Manihiki rocks can best be explained by re-melting of an ultra-depleted source (possibly a common mantle component in the Ontong Java and Manihiki plume sources) re-enriched by ≤1% of an ocean-island-basalt-like melt component. Unlike boninites formed via hydrous flux melting of refractory mantle at subduction zones, these boninite-like intraplate rocks formed through adiabatic decompression melting of refractory plume material that has been metasomatized by ocean-island-basalt-like melts. Our results suggest that caution is required before assuming all Archaean boninites were formed in association with subduction processes

    Contrasting conditions of rift and off-rift silicic magma origin on Iceland

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    Factors controlling the origin of silicic magmas on Iceland are poorly constrained. Here we present new data on H2O content, pressure, temperature, oxygen fugacity, and oxygen isotope composition of rhyolites from Askja, Öræfajökull, and Hekla volcanoes. All these parameters correlate with tectonic (rift and off-rift) setting of the volcanoes. Askja rift rhyolites originate through extensive assimilation of high-temperature hydrothermally altered crust (δ18O < 2‰) at shallow depths (≥1.8 km). These rhyolites are hot (935–1008°C), relatively dry (H2O < 2.7 wt%), and oxidized (QFM = +1.4). Cooler (874–902°C), wet (H2O = 4-6.3 wt%), and non-oxidized (~QFM to QFM-1) off-rift rhyolites (Öræfajökull, Hekla) originate through differentiation deeper in the crust (≥4 km) with almost no or little assimilation of high-T, altered crust, as reflected by slightly lower to normal δ18O values (5.2–6‰). Although off-rift rhyolites predominate during the Holocene, older silicic rocks on Iceland primarily formed in a rift setting possibly analogous to the oldest continental crust on Earth

    Composition, crystallization conditions and genesis of sulfide-saturated parental melts of olivine-phyric rocks from Kamchatsky Mys (Kamchatka, Russia)

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    Highlights • Parental melts of sulfide-bearing KM rocks have near primary MORB-like composition. • Crystallization of these S-saturated melts occurred in near-surface conditions. • Extensive fractionation and crustal assimilation are not the causes of S-saturation. • S content in melts can be restored by accounting for daughter sulfide globules. Abstract Sulfide liquids that immiscibly separate from silicate melts in different magmatic processes accumulate chalcophile metals and may represent important sources of the metals in Earth's crust for the formation of ore deposits. Sulfide phases commonly found in some primitive mid-ocean ridge basalts (MORB) may support the occurrence of sulfide immiscibility in the crust without requiring magma contamination and/or extensive fractionation. However, the records of incipient sulfide melts in equilibrium with primitive high-Mg olivine and Cr-spinel are scarce. Sulfide globules in olivine phenocrysts in picritic rocks of MORB-affinity at Kamchatsky Mys (Eastern Kamchatka, Russia) represent a well-documented example of natural immiscibility in primitive oceanic magmas. Our study examines the conditions of silicate-sulfide immiscibility in these magmas by reporting high precision data on the compositions of Cr-spinel and silicate melt inclusions, hosted in Mg-rich olivine (86.9–90 mol% Fo), which also contain globules of magmatic sulfide melt. Major and trace element contents of reconstructed parental silicate melts, redox conditions (ΔQFM = +0.1 ± 0.16 (1σ) log. units) and crystallization temperature (1200–1285 °C), as well as mantle potential temperatures (~1350 °C), correspond to typical MORB values. We show that nearly 50% of sulfur could be captured in daughter sulfide globules even in reheated melt inclusions, which could lead to a significant underestimation of sulfur content in reconstructed silicate melts. The saturation of these melts in sulfur appears to be unrelated to the effects of melt crystallization and crustal assimilation, so we discuss the reasons for the S variations in reconstructed melts and the influence of pressure and other parameters on the SCSS (Sulfur Content at Sulfide Saturation)

    The role and conditions of second-stage mantle melting in the generation of low-Ti tholeiites and boninites: the case of the Manihiki Plateau and the Troodos ophiolite

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    High-Mg, low-Ti volcanic rocks from the Manihiki Plateau in the Western Pacific share many geochemical characteristics with subduction-related boninites such as high-Ca boninites from the Troodos ophiolite on Cyprus, which are believed to originate by hydrous re-melting of previously depleted mantle. In this paper we compare the Manihiki rocks and Troodos boninites using a new dataset on the major and trace element composition of whole rocks and glasses from these locations, and new high-precision, electron microprobe analyses of olivine and Cr-spinel in these rocks. Our results show that both low-Ti Manihiki rocks and Troodos boninites could originate by re-melting of a previously depleted lherzolite mantle source (20–25% of total melting with 8–10% melting during the first stage), as indicated by strong depletion of magmas in more to less incompatible elements (Sm/Yb 0.5). In comparison with Troodos boninites, the low-Ti Manihiki magmas had distinctively lower H2O contents ( 2 wt% in boninites), ~ 100 °C higher liquidus temperatures at a given olivine Fo-number, lower fO2 (ΔQFM + 0.2) and originated from deeper and hotter mantle (1.4–1.7 GPa, ~ 1440 °C vs. 0.8–1.0 GPa, ~ 1300 °C for Troodos boninites). The data provide new evidence that re-melting of residual upper mantle is not only restricted to subduction zones, where it occurs under hydrous conditions, but can also take place due to interaction of previously depleted upper mantle with mantle plumes from the deep and hotter Earth interior
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