We present the average abundances of the intermediate elements obtained by
performing a stacked analysis of all the galaxy clusters in the archive of the
X-ray telescope ASCA. We determine the abundances of Fe, Si, S, and Ni as a
function of cluster temperature (mass) from 1--10 keV, and place strong upper
limits on the abundances of Ca and Ar. In general, Si and Ni are overabundant
with respect to Fe, while Ar and Ca are very underabundant. The discrepancy
between the abundances of Si, S, Ar, and Ca indicate that the alpha-elements do
not behave homogeneously as a single group. We show that the abundances of the
most well-determined elements Fe, Si, and S in conjunction with recent
theoretical supernovae yields do not give a consistent solution for the
fraction of material produced by Type Ia and Type II supernovae at any
temperature or mass. The general trend is for higher temperature clusters to
have more of their metals produced in Type II supernovae than in Type Ias. The
inconsistency of our results with abundances in the Milky Way indicate that
spiral galaxies are not the dominant metal contributors to the intracluster
medium (ICM). The pattern of elemental abundances requires an additional source
of metals beyond standard SNIa and SNII enrichment. The properties of this new
source are well matched to those of Type II supernovae with very massive,
metal-poor progenitor stars. These results are consistent with a significant
fraction of the ICM metals produced by an early generation of population III
stars.Comment: 18 pages, 11 figures, 7 tables. Submitted to Ap