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| DOI | 10.1016/J.GCA.2019.09.008 | ||||
| Año | 2019 | ||||
| Tipo | artículo de investigación |
Citas Totales
Autores Afiliación Chile
Instituciones Chile
% Participación
Internacional
Autores
Afiliación Extranjera
Instituciones
Extranjeras
Magmas from continental arcs built on thick crust have elevated incompatible element abundances and "enriched" radiogenic isotope ratios compared to magmas erupted in island and continental arcs overlying thinner crust. The relative influence of the slab, mantle, and upper plate on this variability is heavily debated. The Andean Southern Volcanic Zone (SVZ; 33-46 degrees S) is an ideal setting to investigate the production of enriched continental arc compositions, because both crustal thickness and magma chemistry vary coherently along strike. However, the scarcity of primitive magmas in the thick-crusted northern SVZ has hindered previous regional studies. To better address the origin of enriched continental compositions, we investigate the geochemistry (major and trace element abundances, Sr-87/Sr-86 and Nd-143/Nd-144 ratios) of new mafic samples from Don Casimiro and Maipo volcanoes within the Diamante-Maipo Caldera Complex of the northern SVZ. While evolved Diamante-Maipo samples show evidence for crustal assimilation, the trace element and isotopic enrichment of the most mafic samples cannot result from crustal processing, as no known regional or global basement lithologies are enriched in all of the necessary incompatible trace elements. Subduction erosion models similarly fail to account for the enriched isotopic and trace element signature of these samples. Instead, we suggest that the enrichment of northern SVZ magmas is derived from an enriched ambient mantle component (similar to EM1-type ocean island basalts), superimposed on a northward decline in melt extent. A substantial, but nearly uniform contribution of melts from subducting sediment and altered oceanic crust are required at all latitudes. The EM1-like enrichment may arise from recycling of metasomatized subcontinental lithospheric mantle (M-SCLM), as the isotopic trajectory of primitive rear-arc monogenetic cones trend towards the compositions of SCLM melts sampled across South America. Isotopic data from spatially distributed rear-arc centres demonstrate that the arc-parallel variations in the degree of EM1-type enrichment observed in arc-front samples are also present up to 600 km behind the trench in the rear-arc. Rear-arc trace element systematics require significant but variable quantities of slab melts to be transported to the mantle wedge at these large trench distances. Overall, we show that a unified model incorporating variable mantle enrichment, slab additions, and melt extents can account for along and across-arc trends within the SVZ. The recognition that mantle enrichment plays a key role in the production of enriched continental compositions in the SVZ has important implications for our understanding of the chemical evolution of the Earth. If ambient mantle enrichment is not taken into account, petrogenetic models of evolved lavas may overestimate the role of crustal assimilation, which, in turn, may lead models of continental crust growth to overestimate the amount of continental material that has been recycled back into the mantle. (C) 2019 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
| Ord. | Autor | Género | Institución - País |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Wieser, Penny E. | Mujer |
UNIV OXFORD - Reino Unido
University of Oxford - Reino Unido |
| 2 | Turner, Stephen J. | Hombre |
WASHINGTON UNIV - Estados Unidos
Washington University in St. Louis - Estados Unidos |
| 3 | Mather, Tamsin A. | Mujer |
UNIV OXFORD - Reino Unido
University of Oxford - Reino Unido |
| 4 | Pyle, David M. | Hombre |
UNIV OXFORD - Reino Unido
University of Oxford - Reino Unido |
| 5 | Savov, Ivan P. | Hombre |
UNIV LEEDS - Reino Unido
University of Leeds - Reino Unido |
| 6 | OROZCO-LANFRANCO, GABRIEL | Hombre |
Serv Nacl Geol & Miner - Chile
Servicio Nacional de Geología y Minería - Chile |
| Fuente |
|---|
| National Eye Research Centre |
| NERC |
| Natural Environment Research Council |
| NERC DTP studentship |
| NERC DTP |
| Agradecimiento |
|---|
| The authors acknowledge NERC grant 'Mantle volatiles: processes, reservoirs and fluxes' (NE/M000427/1) for funding, and PW acknowledges her NERC DTP studentship (NE/L002507/1) to Cambridge University for support during the writing of this manuscript. The authors thank Melissa Murphy for help with clean lab chemistry, Sally Gibson for use of the LA-ICP-MS, Jason Day for helping with analysis, and Patrick Sugden for assistance with sample preparation for Sr and Nd isotopic analysis in Leeds. We also thank Lucy McGee, Nina Soager, Gary Michelfelder, and Oliver Nebel, as well as several anonymous reviewers for very helpful comments which significantly improved the quality of this manuscript, and Rosemary Hickey-Vargas for editorial handling. |
| The authors acknowledge NERC grant ‘Mantle volatiles: processes, reservoirs and fluxes’ ( NE/M000427/1 ) for funding, and PW acknowledges her NERC DTP studentship ( NE/L002507/1 ) to Cambridge University for support during the writing of this manuscript. The authors thank Melissa Murphy for help with clean lab chemistry, Sally Gibson for use of the LA-ICP-MS, Jason Day for helping with analysis, and Patrick Sugden for assistance with sample preparation for Sr and Nd isotopic analysis in Leeds. We also thank Lucy McGee, Nina Søager, Gary Michelfelder, and Oliver Nebel, as well as several anonymous reviewers for very helpful comments which significantly improved the quality of this manuscript, and Rosemary Hickey-Vargas for editorial handling. Appendix A |