8 research outputs found

    The effects of melt depletion and metasomatism on highly siderophile and strongly chalcophile elements: S–Se–Te–Re–PGE systematics of peridotite xenoliths from Kilbourne Hole, New Mexico

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    The composition of the Earth’s upper mantle is a function of melt depletion and subsequent metasomatism; the latter obscuring many of the key characteristics of the former, and potentially making predictions of Primitive Upper Mantle (PUM) composition problematic. To date, estimates of PUM abundances of highly siderophile element (HSE = platinum group elements (PGE) and Re) and the strongly chalcophile elements Se and Te, have been the subject of less scrutiny than the lithophile elements. Critically, estimates of HSE and strongly chalcophile element abundances in PUM may have been derived by including a large number of metasomatized and refertilized samples whose HSE and chalcophile element abundances may not be representative of melt depletion alone. Unravelling the effects of metasomatism on the S–Se–Te–HSE abundances in peridotite xenoliths from Kilbourne Hole, New Mexico, USA, potentially provides valuable insights into the abundances of HSE and strongly chalcophile element abundances in PUM. Superimposed upon the effects of melt depletion is the addition of metasomatic sulfide in approximately half of the xenoliths from this study, while the remaining half have lost sulfide to a late S-undersaturated melt. Despite these observations, the Kilbourne Hole peridotite xenoliths have HSE systematics that are, in general, indistinguishable from orogenic peridotites and peridotite xenoliths used for determination of PUM HSE abundances. This study represents the first instance where Se-Te-HSE systematics in peridotite xenoliths are scrutinized in detail in order to test their usefulness for PUM estimates. Despite earlier studies attesting to the relative immobility of Se during supergene weathering, low S, Se, Os and Se/Te in peridotite xenoliths suggests that Se may be more mobile than originally thought, and for this reason, peridotite xenoliths may not be suitable for making predictions of the abundance of these elements in PUM. Removal of Se, in turn, lowers the Se/Te in basalt-borne xenolithic peridotites to subchondritic values. This is in contrast to what has been recently reported in kimberlite-borne peridotite xenoliths. Moreover, Te added to melt depleted peridotite in metasomatic sulfide is more difficult to remove in a S-undersaturated melt than the HSE and Se due to the generation of micron-scale tellurides. The effects of these processes in orogenic peridotites and xenoliths, from which PUM abundances have been calculated, require further scrutiny before unequivocal Se-Te-Re-PGE values for PUM can be derived

    Platinum-group elements, S, Se and Cu in highly depleted abyssal peridotites from the Mid-Atlantic Ocean Ridge (ODP Hole 1274A): Influence of hydrothermal and magmatic processes

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    Highly depleted harzburgites and dunites were recovered from ODP Hole 1274A, near the intersection between the Mid-Atlantic Ocean Ridge and the 15°20′N Fracture Zone. In addition to high degrees of partial melting, these peridotites underwent multiple episodes of melt-rock reaction and intense serpentinization and seawater alteration close to the seafloor. Low concentrations of Se, Cu and platinum-group elements (PGE) in harzburgites drilled at around 35-85 m below seafloor are consistent with the consumption of mantle sulfides after high degrees (>15-20 %) of partial melting and redistribution of chalcophile and siderophile elements into PGE-rich residual microphases. Higher concentrations of Cu, Se, Ru, Rh and Pd in harzburgites from the uppermost and lowest cores testify to late reaction with a sulfide melt. Dunites were formed by percolation of silica- and sulfur-undersaturated melts into low-Se harzburgites. Platinum-group and chalcophile elements were not mobilized during dunite formation and mostly preserve the signature of precursor harzburgites, except for higher Ru and lower Pt contents caused by precipitation and removal of platinum-group minerals. During serpentinization at low temperature (<250 °C) and reducing conditions, mantle sulfides experienced desulfurization to S-poor sulfides (mainly heazlewoodite) and awaruite. Contrary to Se and Cu, sulfur does not record the magmatic evolution of peridotites but was mostly added in hydrothermal sulfides and sulfate from seawater. Platinum-group elements were unaffected by post-magmatic low-temperature processes, except Pt and Pd that may have been slightly remobilized during oxidative seawater alteration

    11B-rich fluids in subduction zones: the role of antigorite dehydration in subducting slabs and boron isotope heterogeneity in the mantle

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    Serpentinites form by hydration of mantle peridotite and constitute the largest potential reservoir of fluid-mobile elements entering subduction zones. Isotope ratios of one such element, boron, distinguish fluid contributions from crustal versus serpentinite sources. Despite 85% of boron hosted within abyssal peridotite being lost at the onset of subduction at the lizardite-to-antigorite transition, a sufficient cargo of boron to account for the composition of island arc magma is retained (c. 7 μg g− 1, with a δ11B of + 22‰) until the down-going slab reaches the antigorite-out isograd. At this point a 11B-rich fluid, capable of providing the distinctive δ11B signature of island arc basalts, is released. Beyond the uniquely preserved antigorite-out isograd in serpentinites from Cerro del Almirez, Betic Cordillera, Spain, the prograde lithologies (antigorite–chlorite–orthopyroxene–olivine serpentinite, granofels-texture chlorite-harzburgite and spinifex-texture chlorite-harzburgite) have very different boron isotope signatures (δ11B = − 3 to + 6‰), but with no significant difference in boron concentration compared to the antigorite-serpentinite on the low P–T side of the isograd. 11B-rich fluid, which at least partly equilibrated with pelagic sediments, is implicated in the composition of these prograde lithologies, which dehydrated under open-system conditions. Serpentinite-hosted boron lost during the early stages of dehydration is readily incorporated into forearc peridotite. This, in turn, may be dragged to sub-arc depths as a result of subduction erosion and incorporated in a mélange comprising forearc serpentinite, altered oceanic crust and pelagic sediment. At the antigorite-out isograd it dehydrates, thus potentially providing an additional source of 11B-rich fluids
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