Inter-element fractionation of highly siderophile elements in the Tonga Arc due to flux melting of a depleted source

被引:94
作者
Dale, Christopher W. [1 ]
Macpherson, Colin G. [1 ]
Pearson, D. Graham [1 ]
Hammond, Samantha J. [2 ]
Arculus, Richard J. [3 ]
机构
[1] Univ Durham, Dept Earth Sci, NCIET, Sci Labs, Durham DH1 3LE, England
[2] Open Univ, CEPSAR, Dept Earth & Environm Sci, Milton Keynes MK7 6AA, Bucks, England
[3] Australian Natl Univ, Dept Earth & Marine Sci, Canberra, ACT 0200, Australia
基金
英国自然环境研究理事会;
关键词
PLATINUM-GROUP ELEMENTS; RE-OS ISOTOPE; MONOSULFIDE SOLID-SOLUTION; ABLATION ICP-MS; OSMIUM ISOTOPE; OCEANIC-CRUST; SILICATE MELT; MANTLE SOURCE; SULFIDE MELT; EXPERIMENTAL CONSTRAINTS;
D O I
10.1016/j.gca.2012.03.025
中图分类号
P3 [地球物理学]; P59 [地球化学];
学科分类号
0708 ; 070902 ;
摘要
Highly siderophile element concentrations (HSEs: Os, Ir, Ru, Pt, Pd, and Re) have been determined for a suite of fresh, submarine mafic lavas from the northern Tonga Arc front and the nascent backarc Fonualei Spreading Centre (FSC). Prior melt depletion of the Tongan mantle wedge combined with a high degree of fluid fluxed melting is thought to have produced boninitic magmas at several arc and FSC locations. As such, this arc system provides an opportunity to assess the fluid mobility of HSEs and to investigate the effects of fluid-induced melting and prior melt depletion on HSE behaviour during both mantle melting and magma evolution. Tongan lavas display extreme enrichment of Pt (2.5-32 ng/g) and Pd over Os (0.002-0.6 ng/g), Ir, and Ru, significantly greater than basalts from mid-ocean ridges. Magma evolution increases the degree of fractionation, resulting in the highest recorded Pt/Ru ratios (>300) in arc front samples with MgO <8 wt.%. This increasing fractionation is due to the mild incompatibility of Pt and Pd, and concurrent compatibility of Ru, during sulphide undersaturated magma evolution. However, the fractionation of Pt and Pd from Os, Ir, and Ru is observed in the highest MgO samples, indicating source inheritance. Prior melt depletion of the mantle and elevated oxygen fugacity both increase the likelihood of complete consumption of sulphide in the source during melting, which typically leads to melts with high concentrations of all the HSE. Indeed, modelling indicates that 25% aggregate partial melting of a depleted MORB-mantle source, proposed for the Tonga Arc, will lead to complete base-metal sulphide consumption unless there is considerable addition of S by the slab flux (at least 200 mu g/g). Although source enrichment of Pt, Pd, and Re by slab fluids may take place, the fractionation of Pt and Pd from Os, Ir, and Ru can largely be explained by relatively low-temperature, yet high-degree, melting of fluid-fluxed melt-depleted mantle. The high Pt and Pd contents can be produced by the exhaustion of sulphide in the source, while the presence of Ru-Os-(Ir) alloys or sulphides (e.g. laurite) associated with Cr-spinel can explain Os, Ir, and Ru retention in the source residue. Such phases have been documented in fluid-fluxed sub-arc mantle from ophiolites. Osmium isotopes co-vary negatively with Os abundance and thus appear to be dominated by shallow level contamination. The most Os-rich samples, however, have Os-187/Os-188 ratios (0.126-0.132) which are typical of DMM and MORB, suggesting an indistinguishable flux of radiogenic Os from the slab. The significant fractionation of Pt and Re from Os in arc settings will lead, over time, to elevated Os-186 and Os-187 which may be relevant to the observed enrichments of these isotopes in some mantle regions. In addition, the differing behaviour of Ru and Ir, and the implication of a mantle source containing Ru-rich micro-phases, may have consequences for the estimation of the HSE composition of primitive upper mantle. (C) 2012 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:202 / 225
页数:24
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