Chlorine-potassium variations in melt inclusions from Raivavae and Rapa, Austral Islands: constraints on chlorine recycling in the mantle and evidence for brine-induced melting of oceanic crust

Chlorine abundance variations in oceanic basalts can provide insights into the degassing and volatile recycling history of the mantle as well as shallow melt/hydrosphere interaction. We have examined major, trace and volatile element abundances in olivine-hosted melt inclusions from the islands of R...

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Main Authors: Lassiter, J., Hauri, E., Nikogosian, I., Barsczus, H.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: 2002
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11858/00-001M-0000-0014-9080-2
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spelling ftpubman:oai:pure.mpg.de:item_1831023 2023-08-20T04:05:22+02:00 Chlorine-potassium variations in melt inclusions from Raivavae and Rapa, Austral Islands: constraints on chlorine recycling in the mantle and evidence for brine-induced melting of oceanic crust Earth Planet. Sci. Lett. Lassiter, J. Hauri, E. Nikogosian, I. Barsczus, H. 2002-09-30 http://hdl.handle.net/11858/00-001M-0000-0014-9080-2 eng eng http://hdl.handle.net/11858/00-001M-0000-0014-9080-2 Earth and Planetary Science Letters info:eu-repo/semantics/article 2002 ftpubman 2023-08-01T22:33:38Z Chlorine abundance variations in oceanic basalts can provide insights into the degassing and volatile recycling history of the mantle as well as shallow melt/hydrosphere interaction. We have examined major, trace and volatile element abundances in olivine-hosted melt inclusions from the islands of Raivavae and Rapa in the Austral Island chain. The island, of Raivavae sits atop a pre-existing fracture zone and thus provides the opportunity to examine the relationship between melt/hydrosphere interaction and local lithospheric structure. The majority of inclusions from both Raivavae and Rapa have well correlated chlorine and potassium concentrations consistent with a source Cl/K2O ratio of similar to0.04, similar to that of uncontaminated mid-ocean ridge and ocean island basalts. The similarity of chlorine/potassium ratios in mid-ocean ridge basalts, Austral Islands basalts, and basalts from many other ocean islands suggests that chlorine/potassium does not significantly vary in the mantle. Because the plume sources of many ocean island chains contain varying types and quantities of recycled oceanic crust and sediments, this indicates that most of the chlorine added to oceanic crust during seafloor alteration is removed during subduction and is not recycled into the deep mantle. High chlorine contents (up to 0.14 wt%) and chlorine/potassium ratios in melt inclusions from an early-erupted Raivavae lava derive from assimilation of Cl-rich brines or brine-impregnated oceanic crust. A small subset of inclusions from the same lava show more extreme chlorine enrichment (up to 2.5 wt%), are depleted in incompatible trace elements relative to normal inclusions, and show extreme fractionation of high-field-strength elements (HFSEs) relative to large-ion-lithophile or rare-earth elements. These latter inclusions derive from partial melting of the pre-existing oceanic crust under brine-saturated conditions. HFSE depletions in these inclusions reflect the stabilization of a HFSE-bearing phase in the lower crust, probably due ... Article in Journal/Newspaper Austral Island Ocean Island Max Planck Society: MPG.PuRe Austral Austral Island ENVELOPE(110.650,110.650,-66.500,-66.500) Rapa ENVELOPE(15.539,15.539,69.033,69.033)
institution Open Polar
collection Max Planck Society: MPG.PuRe
op_collection_id ftpubman
language English
description Chlorine abundance variations in oceanic basalts can provide insights into the degassing and volatile recycling history of the mantle as well as shallow melt/hydrosphere interaction. We have examined major, trace and volatile element abundances in olivine-hosted melt inclusions from the islands of Raivavae and Rapa in the Austral Island chain. The island, of Raivavae sits atop a pre-existing fracture zone and thus provides the opportunity to examine the relationship between melt/hydrosphere interaction and local lithospheric structure. The majority of inclusions from both Raivavae and Rapa have well correlated chlorine and potassium concentrations consistent with a source Cl/K2O ratio of similar to0.04, similar to that of uncontaminated mid-ocean ridge and ocean island basalts. The similarity of chlorine/potassium ratios in mid-ocean ridge basalts, Austral Islands basalts, and basalts from many other ocean islands suggests that chlorine/potassium does not significantly vary in the mantle. Because the plume sources of many ocean island chains contain varying types and quantities of recycled oceanic crust and sediments, this indicates that most of the chlorine added to oceanic crust during seafloor alteration is removed during subduction and is not recycled into the deep mantle. High chlorine contents (up to 0.14 wt%) and chlorine/potassium ratios in melt inclusions from an early-erupted Raivavae lava derive from assimilation of Cl-rich brines or brine-impregnated oceanic crust. A small subset of inclusions from the same lava show more extreme chlorine enrichment (up to 2.5 wt%), are depleted in incompatible trace elements relative to normal inclusions, and show extreme fractionation of high-field-strength elements (HFSEs) relative to large-ion-lithophile or rare-earth elements. These latter inclusions derive from partial melting of the pre-existing oceanic crust under brine-saturated conditions. HFSE depletions in these inclusions reflect the stabilization of a HFSE-bearing phase in the lower crust, probably due ...
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Lassiter, J.
Hauri, E.
Nikogosian, I.
Barsczus, H.
spellingShingle Lassiter, J.
Hauri, E.
Nikogosian, I.
Barsczus, H.
Chlorine-potassium variations in melt inclusions from Raivavae and Rapa, Austral Islands: constraints on chlorine recycling in the mantle and evidence for brine-induced melting of oceanic crust
author_facet Lassiter, J.
Hauri, E.
Nikogosian, I.
Barsczus, H.
author_sort Lassiter, J.
title Chlorine-potassium variations in melt inclusions from Raivavae and Rapa, Austral Islands: constraints on chlorine recycling in the mantle and evidence for brine-induced melting of oceanic crust
title_short Chlorine-potassium variations in melt inclusions from Raivavae and Rapa, Austral Islands: constraints on chlorine recycling in the mantle and evidence for brine-induced melting of oceanic crust
title_full Chlorine-potassium variations in melt inclusions from Raivavae and Rapa, Austral Islands: constraints on chlorine recycling in the mantle and evidence for brine-induced melting of oceanic crust
title_fullStr Chlorine-potassium variations in melt inclusions from Raivavae and Rapa, Austral Islands: constraints on chlorine recycling in the mantle and evidence for brine-induced melting of oceanic crust
title_full_unstemmed Chlorine-potassium variations in melt inclusions from Raivavae and Rapa, Austral Islands: constraints on chlorine recycling in the mantle and evidence for brine-induced melting of oceanic crust
title_sort chlorine-potassium variations in melt inclusions from raivavae and rapa, austral islands: constraints on chlorine recycling in the mantle and evidence for brine-induced melting of oceanic crust
publishDate 2002
url http://hdl.handle.net/11858/00-001M-0000-0014-9080-2
long_lat ENVELOPE(110.650,110.650,-66.500,-66.500)
ENVELOPE(15.539,15.539,69.033,69.033)
geographic Austral
Austral Island
Rapa
geographic_facet Austral
Austral Island
Rapa
genre Austral Island
Ocean Island
genre_facet Austral Island
Ocean Island
op_source Earth and Planetary Science Letters
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/11858/00-001M-0000-0014-9080-2
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