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Reevaluating the fate of subducted magnesite in the Earth's lower mantle.

Authors :
Libon, Lélia
Spiekermann, Georg
Blanchard, Ingrid
Kaa, Johannes M.
Dominijanni, Serena
Sieber, Melanie J.
Förster, Mirko
Albers, Christian
Morgenroth, Wolfgang
McCammon, Catherine
Schreiber, Anja
Roddatis, Vladimir
Glazyrin, Konstantin
Husband, Rachel J.
Hennet, Louis
Appel, Karen
Wilke, Max
Source :
Physics of the Earth & Planetary Interiors. Oct2024, Vol. 355, pN.PAG-N.PAG. 1p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

The role that subducted carbonates play in sourcing and storing carbon in the deep Earth's interior is uncertain, primarily due to poor constraints on the stability of carbonate minerals when interacting with mantle phases. Magnesite (MgCO 3) is the most prominent carbonate phase to be present at all mantle pressure-temperature conditions. In this study, we combined multi-anvil apparatus and laser-heated diamond anvil cell experiments to investigate the stability of magnesite in contact with iron-bearing bridgmanite. We examined the presence of melt, decarbonation, and diamond formation at shallow to mid-lower mantle conditions (25 to 68 GPa; 1350 to 2000 K). Our main observation indicates that magnesite is not stable at shallow lower mantle conditions. At 25 GPa and under oxidizing conditions, melting of magnesite is observed in multi-anvil experiments at temperatures corresponding to all geotherms except the coldest ones. Whereas, at higher pressures and under reducing conditions, in our laser-heated diamond-anvil cell experiments, diamond nucleation is observed as a sub-solidus process even at temperatures relevant to the coldest slab geotherms. Our results indicate that magnesite was reduced and formed diamonds when in contact with the ambient peridotite mantle at depths corresponding to the shallowest lower mantle (33 GPa). Thus, we establish that solid magnesite decomposes at depths of ∼700 km as it contacts the ambient mantle. Consequently, the recycling of carbonates will hinder their transport deeper into the lower mantle. [Display omitted] • The stability of magnesite (MgCO 3) was investigated in the presence of iron-bearing bridgmanite at conditions from 25 to 68 GPa and temperatures covering all subduction geotherms (1350 K to 2000 K). • Magnesite reacts with iron-bearing bridgmanite to form diamonds at conditions relevant to the coldest geotherm. • Subduction of magnesite, and more generally carbonates, is limited to the top of the lower mantle (∼700 km depths), even along cold slabs geotherm. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
00319201
Volume :
355
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Physics of the Earth & Planetary Interiors
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
179630139
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.pepi.2024.107238