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A Spectrum of EM-Type Mantle Endmembers

Authors :
Class, C.
Goldstein, S. L.
Shirey, S. B.
Le Roex, A.
O'Connor, John
Jokat, Wilfried
Class, C.
Goldstein, S. L.
Shirey, S. B.
Le Roex, A.
O'Connor, John
Jokat, Wilfried
Source :
EPIC3AGU Fall Meeting 2009, San Francisco.
Publication Year :
2009

Abstract

It has been more than two decades since White (1985) and Zindler and Hart (1986) proposed that the observed range of Sr-Nd-Pb isotope ratios of oceanic basalts can be described as mixtures of depleted mantle (DMM) with a limited number of enriched global endmember components (HIMU, EMI, EMII). There is no doubt that the global endmembers in isotope space represent extremes of the timing and magnitude of chemical fractionation processes in the Earths mantle. However, it remains a matter of debate how the intermediate isotopic compositions often evident on the local scale of individual islands are formed: (1) Do they represent mixtures between the limited number of global endmembers, or (2) do they reflect processes intermediate to the ones forming the global endmembers, or (3) does each individual ocean island basalt suite provide us with information about the timing and kind of geochemical differentiation forming that single source? Each possibility has important geodynamic implications. The Earths mantle is continuously differentiating through partial melting and remixing through plate tectonic recycling and convection, suggesting variable timing and composition of mantle sources. However, mantle sources might be formed by mixed lithologies and thus melt compositions might reflect mixtures of sources of more extreme compositions, possibly representing the global endmembers. We further address these questions based on two examples. Grande Comore Island is located on 140 Ma Indian Ocean lithosphere and its lavas reflect plume-lithosphere interaction. The Grande Comore plume component has Sr-Nd-Pb isotopic compositions intermediate between HIMU and EMI. Its extreme Os isotope ratios are among the highest measured in shield building-stage lavas of oceanic islands, giving further support for generally radiogenic Os isotope ratios in the EMI and HIMU compositions. A lack of correlation between OIB with high Os isotope ratios with inferred lithospheric thickness implies t

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
EPIC3AGU Fall Meeting 2009, San Francisco.
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.ocn900578059
Document Type :
Electronic Resource