The origin and evolution of eclogite xenoliths and associated diamonds from the Jericho kimberlite, northern Slave craton, Canada: an integrated petrological, geochemical and isotopic study

Degree: Doctor of Philosophy Abstract: Diamond-bearing eclogite xenoliths are relatively rare but provide insight into the composition and evolution of the cratonic lithospheric mantle and also insight into the diamond formation process. The major-, trace-element and Sr-Pb-O-isotope compositions of...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Smart, Kathleen A
Other Authors: Chacko, Thomas (Earth and Atmospheric Sciences), Pearson, Graham (Earth and Atmospheric Sciences), Gu, Jeff (Physics), Stachel, Thomas (Earth and Atmospheric Sciences), Jacob, Dorrit (Mainz, Petrologie), Muehlenbachs, Karlis (Earth and Atmospheric Sciences)
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: University of Alberta. Department of Earth and Atmospheric Sciences. 2011
Subjects:
geo
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10402/era.27698
Description
Summary:Degree: Doctor of Philosophy Abstract: Diamond-bearing eclogite xenoliths are relatively rare but provide insight into the composition and evolution of the cratonic lithospheric mantle and also insight into the diamond formation process. The major-, trace-element and Sr-Pb-O-isotope compositions of both high- and low-MgO diamond eclogites from the Jericho kimberlite, Nunavut, Canada, indicate that each group had different geneses. Both eclogite groups formed as parts of ancient oceanic lithosphere; positive Sr anomalies and δ18O values of 6.5-6.6‰ of the low MgO eclogites indicate seawater-altered gabbroic protoliths, while the high Mg and Cr, fractionated HREEs, and δ18O values of 5.3-5.5‰ of the high-MgO eclogites indicate a mantle origin. High-MgO eclogite crystallization probably occurred at 2-3 GPa where mantle-derived melts are generally basaltic, as melts in the diamond stability field are far too Mg-rich. As such, eclogite crystallization likely occurred as pyroxenite veins at the underside of thick Archean oceanic lithosphere. Although there are no age constraints for the diamond eclogites, both groups could have been imbricated into the cratonic mantle by subduction stacking of lithosphere during putative Neoarchean or Paleoproterozoic subduction events in the Slave craton. The petrogenesis of the high-MgO eclogites is further complicated by diamond inclusions with lower Cr2O3 and Mg-numbers but higher CaO, Na2O and Al2O3; element exchange with surrounding peridotite after diamond formation altered the eclogite composition. Diamonds from each eclogite group have widely different carbon isotope compositions and nitrogen contents and thus the diamond forming fluids/melts were derived from disparate sources. Diamonds from the high-MgO eclogites have extremely low δ13C values of -40‰ which require derivation from subducted organic carbon; diamonds from the low-MgO eclogites have δ13C values from -4.75 to -3.5 and could have been sourced from either fractionated mantle-derived carbon or subducted carbonate ...