Os isotopic composition of western Aleutian adakites: Implications for the Re/Os of oceanic crust processed through hot subduction zones

被引:7
作者
Bezard, Rachel [1 ,2 ]
Turner, Simon [2 ]
Schaefer, Bruce [2 ]
Yogodzinski, Gene [3 ]
Hoernle, Kaj [4 ,5 ]
机构
[1] Goettingen Univ, Dept Isotope Geol, Goldschmidtstr 1, D-37077 Gottingen, Germany
[2] Macquarie Univ, Dept Earth & Environm Sci, 12 Wallys Walk, N Ryde, NSW 2109, Australia
[3] Univ South Carolina, Sch Earth Ocean & Environm, Columbia, SC 29208 USA
[4] GEOMAR Helmholtz Ctr Ocean Res Kiel, Wischhofstr 1-3, D-24148 Kiel, Germany
[5] Christian Albrecht Univ Kiel, Ludewig Meyn Str 10, D-24118 Kiel, Germany
基金
美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
Island arc; Slab melting; Subduction; Crustal recycling; Rhenium; Osmium; HIGHLY SIDEROPHILE ELEMENT; RE-OS; VOLCANIC-ROCKS; OSMIUM ISOTOPE; MAGNESIAN ANDESITES; MANTLE WEDGE; ODP SITE-801; CASCADE ARC; SLAB; CONSTRAINTS;
D O I
10.1016/j.gca.2020.10.009
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
Constraining the behaviour of Re and Os during eclogite melting is required to understand the Re and Os budget and Os-187/Os-188 of recycled slabs produced at warm subduction zones. It is particularly relevant to early Earth history, a period during which slab melting could have prevailed over dehydration due to higher mantle temperatures. There are however cur-rently few constraints on Re and Os mobility during slab melting. Accordingly, we measured Os, Re and Os-187/Os-188 in primitive submarine lavas (Mg# > 0.6) from the western Aleutian Arc. These include strongly adakitic rocks shown to be derived from eclogite melting (high-Mg# andesite, dacites and rhyodacites), as well as non-adakitic rocks (high-Mg# andesites, basaltic andesites and basalts) with variable sediment and fluid-derived slab contributions for comparison. The Os-187/Os-188 of the adakitic and non-adakitic volcanic rocks vary significantly but largely overlap. In both groups, the most radiogenic values occur in samples with the lowest Os concentrations, thus implicating crustal assimilation as the main cause of Os isotope variations. Adakitic and non-adakitic rocks least affected by crustal assimilation have overlapping Os-187/Os-188 of 0.141-0.149. We show that the source of the adakites is very unlikely to comprise significant eclogite-derived Os, which suggests no or minimal mobilization of Os during eclogite melting. Eclogitic Os is inferred to be retained in sulphides or replacement phases formed upon sulphide breakdown for which Os has high affinity, such as a platinum-group minerals (PGMs). The small Os budget of the adakites is most likely derived from limited reaction with the mantle wedge during ascent. Degassing has reduced Re contents in most samples, but not for end-member adakites (SiO2 > 67% and Sr/Y > 200; n = 4) that were erupted at seafloor depths > 2500 m. These undegassed samples have elevated Re concentrations (0.8-1.5 ppb) that are positively correlated with Sr/Y and so are interpreted to be primary magmatic concentrations resulting from the mobilization of Re from the slab. Re could either be derived from the eclogites or from the serpentinite-derived fluids fluxing eclogites during melting. The former scenario would produce recycled residual crusts with lower Re/Os than in unmelted eclogites while the latter would result in Re/Os ranging from similar to higher than prior to melting. In both cases, the Re/Os and therefore the time-integrated Os-187/Os-188 of residual crust produced at warm subduction zones involving slab melting are likely to be different from that processed at cooler typical modern subduction zones. Therefore, if slab melting was an important process during the early Earth, the use of Re and Os partitioning in modern subduction zones to model the source of magmas com prising old recycled oceanic crust, such as the HIMU (high mu = U-238/Pb-204) ocean island basalts (OIBs), might lead to erro-neous interpretations. (C) 2020 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
引用
收藏
页码:452 / 467
页数:16
相关论文
共 97 条
  • [1] In situ Os isotopes in abyssal peridotites bridge the isotopic gap between MORBs and their source mantle
    Alard, O
    Luguet, A
    Pearson, NJ
    Griffin, WL
    Lorand, JP
    Gannoun, A
    Burton, KW
    O'Reilly, SY
    [J]. NATURE, 2005, 436 (7053) : 1005 - 1008
  • [2] Rhenium-osmium isotopic investigation of Java']Java subduction zone lavas
    Alves, S
    Schiano, P
    Allègre, CJ
    [J]. EARTH AND PLANETARY SCIENCE LETTERS, 1999, 168 (1-2) : 65 - 77
  • [3] Geochemistry of hydrothermally altered oceanic crust: DSDP/ODP Hole 504B - Implications for seawater-crust exchange budgets and Sr- and Pb-isotopic evolution of the mantle
    Bach, W
    Peucker-Ehrenbrink, B
    Hart, SR
    Blusztajn, JS
    [J]. GEOCHEMISTRY GEOPHYSICS GEOSYSTEMS, 2003, 4
  • [4] Re-Os and U-Pb geochronological constraints on the eclogite-tonalite connection in the Archean Man Shield, West Africa
    Barth, MG
    Rudnick, RL
    Carlson, RW
    Horn, I
    McDonough, WF
    [J]. PRECAMBRIAN RESEARCH, 2002, 118 (3-4) : 267 - 283
  • [5] Re-Os fractionation in eclogites and blueschists and the implications for recycling of oceanic crust into the mantle
    Becker, H
    [J]. EARTH AND PLANETARY SCIENCE LETTERS, 2000, 177 (3-4) : 287 - 300
  • [6] Re-Pt-Os Isotopic and Highly Siderophile Element Behavior in Oceanic and Continental Mantle Tectonites
    Becker, Harry
    Dale, Christopher W.
    [J]. HIGHLY SIDEROPHILE AND STRONGLY CHALCOPHILE ELEMENTS IN HIGH-TEMPERATURE GEOCHEMISTRY AND COSMOCHEMISTRY, 2016, 81 : 369 - 440
  • [7] Lower crustal assimilation in oceanic arcs: Insights from an osmium isotopic study of the Lesser Antilles
    Bezard, Rachel
    Schaefer, Bruce F.
    Turner, Simon
    Davidson, Jon P.
    Selby, David
    [J]. GEOCHIMICA ET COSMOCHIMICA ACTA, 2015, 150 : 330 - 344
  • [8] Re-Os isotopic systematics of primitive lavas from the Lassen region of the Cascade arc, California
    Borg, LE
    Brandon, AD
    Clynne, MA
    Walker, RJ
    [J]. EARTH AND PLANETARY SCIENCE LETTERS, 2000, 177 (3-4) : 301 - 317
  • [9] A numerical approach to melting in warm subduction zones
    Bouilhol, Pierre
    Magni, Valentina
    van Hunen, Jeroen
    Kaislaniemi, Lars
    [J]. EARTH AND PLANETARY SCIENCE LETTERS, 2015, 411 : 37 - 44
  • [10] The Lu-Hf and Sm-Nd isotopic composition of CHUR: Constraints from unequilibrated chondrites and implications for the bulk composition of terrestrial planets
    Bouvier, Audrey
    Vervoort, Jeffrey D.
    Patchett, P. Jonathan
    [J]. EARTH AND PLANETARY SCIENCE LETTERS, 2008, 273 (1-2) : 48 - 57