High-MgO lavas associated to CFB as indicators of plume-related thermochemical effects: the case of ultra-titaniferous picrite-basalt from the Northern Ethiopian-Yemeni plateau

A comprehensive petrological and geochemical dataset is reported in order to define the thermo-compositional characteristics of Ti (Fe)-enriched picrite-basalt lavas (HT2, TiO2 3-7 wt%), erupted close to the axial zone of the inferred Afar mantle plume, at the centre of the originally continuous Eth...

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Published in:Gondwana Research
Main Authors: Natali, Claudio, Beccaluva, Luigi, Bianchini, Gianluca G., Ellam, Robert M., Savo, Andrea, Siena, Franca, Stuart, Finlay M.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2016
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Online Access:http://eprints.gla.ac.uk/117963/
http://eprints.gla.ac.uk/117963/7/117963.pdf
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description A comprehensive petrological and geochemical dataset is reported in order to define the thermo-compositional characteristics of Ti (Fe)-enriched picrite-basalt lavas (HT2, TiO2 3-7 wt%), erupted close to the axial zone of the inferred Afar mantle plume, at the centre of the originally continuous Ethiopian-Yemeni CFB plateau (ca. 30Ma) which is zonally arranged with progressively lower Ti basalts (HT1, TiO2 2-4 wt%; LT, TiO2 1-3 wt%) toward the periphery. Integrated petrogenetic modelling based on major and trace element analyses of bulk rocks, minerals and melt inclusions in olivines, as well as Sr-Nd-Pb-He-O isotope compositional variations enables us to make several conclusions. 1) The phase equilibria constraints indicate that HT2 primary picrites were generated at ca. 1570°C mantle potential temperatures (Tp) in the pressure range 4-5 GPa whereas the HT1 and LT primary melts formed at shallower level (< 2 to 3 GPa, Tp 1530 °C for HT1 and 1430°C for LT). Thus the Afar plume head was a thermally and compositionally zoned melting region with maximum excess temperatures of 300-350°C with respect to the ambient mantle. 2) The HT2 primary melts upwelled nearly adiabatically to the base of the continental crust (ca. 1 GPa) where fractionation of olivine, followed by clinopyroxene, led to variably differentiated picritic and basaltic magmas. 3) Trace element modelling requires that the primary HT2 melts were generated - either by fractional or batch melting (F 9-10%) - from a mixed garnet peridotite source (85%) with 15% eclogite (derived from transitional MORB protoliths included in Panafrican terranes) that has to be considered a specific Ti-Fe and incompatible element enriched component entrained by the Afar plume. 4) The LT, HT1 and HT2 lavas have 143Nd/144Nd = 0.5131-0.5128, whereas Sr-Pb isotopes are positively correlated with TiO2, varying from 87 Sr/86Sr 0.7032 and 206Pb/204Pb 18.2 in LT basalts to 87Sr/86Sr 0.7044 and 206Pb/204Pb 19.4 in HT2 picrite-basalts. High 3He/4He (15-20 RA) ratios are exclusively observed in HT2 lavas, confirming earlier evidence that these magmas require a component of deep mantle in addition to eclogite, while the LT basalts may more effectively reflect the signature of the pre-existing mantle domains. The comparison between high-MgO (13-22%) lavas from several Phanerozoic CFB provinces (Karoo, Paranà-Etendeka, Emeishan, Siberia, Deccan, North Atlantic Province) shows that they share extremely high mantle potential temperatures (Tp 1550-1700°C) supporting the view that hot mantle plumes are favoured candidates for triggering many LIPs. However, the high incompatible element and isotopic variability of these high-MgO lavas (and associated CFB) suggest that plume thermal anomalies are not necessarily accompanied by significant and specific chemical effects, which depend on the nature of mantle materials recycled during the plume rise, as well as by the extent of related mantle enrichments (if any) on the pre-existing lithospheric section.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Natali, Claudio
Beccaluva, Luigi
Bianchini, Gianluca G.
Ellam, Robert M.
Savo, Andrea
Siena, Franca
Stuart, Finlay M.
spellingShingle Natali, Claudio
Beccaluva, Luigi
Bianchini, Gianluca G.
Ellam, Robert M.
Savo, Andrea
Siena, Franca
Stuart, Finlay M.
High-MgO lavas associated to CFB as indicators of plume-related thermochemical effects: the case of ultra-titaniferous picrite-basalt from the Northern Ethiopian-Yemeni plateau
author_facet Natali, Claudio
Beccaluva, Luigi
Bianchini, Gianluca G.
Ellam, Robert M.
Savo, Andrea
Siena, Franca
Stuart, Finlay M.
author_sort Natali, Claudio
title High-MgO lavas associated to CFB as indicators of plume-related thermochemical effects: the case of ultra-titaniferous picrite-basalt from the Northern Ethiopian-Yemeni plateau
title_short High-MgO lavas associated to CFB as indicators of plume-related thermochemical effects: the case of ultra-titaniferous picrite-basalt from the Northern Ethiopian-Yemeni plateau
title_full High-MgO lavas associated to CFB as indicators of plume-related thermochemical effects: the case of ultra-titaniferous picrite-basalt from the Northern Ethiopian-Yemeni plateau
title_fullStr High-MgO lavas associated to CFB as indicators of plume-related thermochemical effects: the case of ultra-titaniferous picrite-basalt from the Northern Ethiopian-Yemeni plateau
title_full_unstemmed High-MgO lavas associated to CFB as indicators of plume-related thermochemical effects: the case of ultra-titaniferous picrite-basalt from the Northern Ethiopian-Yemeni plateau
title_sort high-mgo lavas associated to cfb as indicators of plume-related thermochemical effects: the case of ultra-titaniferous picrite-basalt from the northern ethiopian-yemeni plateau
publisher Elsevier
publishDate 2016
url http://eprints.gla.ac.uk/117963/
http://eprints.gla.ac.uk/117963/7/117963.pdf
genre North Atlantic
Siberia
genre_facet North Atlantic
Siberia
op_relation http://eprints.gla.ac.uk/117963/7/117963.pdf
Natali, C., Beccaluva, L., Bianchini, G. G., Ellam, R. M. <http://eprints.gla.ac.uk/view/author/11651.html> , Savo, A., Siena, F. and Stuart, F. M. <http://eprints.gla.ac.uk/view/author/5291.html> (2016) High-MgO lavas associated to CFB as indicators of plume-related thermochemical effects: the case of ultra-titaniferous picrite-basalt from the Northern Ethiopian-Yemeni plateau. Gondwana Research <http://eprints.gla.ac.uk/view/journal_volume/Gondwana_Research.html>, 34, pp. 29-48. (doi:10.1016/j.gr.2016.02.009 <http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.gr.2016.02.009>)
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gr.2016.02.009
container_title Gondwana Research
container_volume 34
container_start_page 29
op_container_end_page 48
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spelling ftuglasgow:oai:eprints.gla.ac.uk:117963 2023-05-15T17:37:22+02:00 High-MgO lavas associated to CFB as indicators of plume-related thermochemical effects: the case of ultra-titaniferous picrite-basalt from the Northern Ethiopian-Yemeni plateau Natali, Claudio Beccaluva, Luigi Bianchini, Gianluca G. Ellam, Robert M. Savo, Andrea Siena, Franca Stuart, Finlay M. 2016-02-26 text http://eprints.gla.ac.uk/117963/ http://eprints.gla.ac.uk/117963/7/117963.pdf en eng Elsevier http://eprints.gla.ac.uk/117963/7/117963.pdf Natali, C., Beccaluva, L., Bianchini, G. G., Ellam, R. M. <http://eprints.gla.ac.uk/view/author/11651.html> , Savo, A., Siena, F. and Stuart, F. M. <http://eprints.gla.ac.uk/view/author/5291.html> (2016) High-MgO lavas associated to CFB as indicators of plume-related thermochemical effects: the case of ultra-titaniferous picrite-basalt from the Northern Ethiopian-Yemeni plateau. Gondwana Research <http://eprints.gla.ac.uk/view/journal_volume/Gondwana_Research.html>, 34, pp. 29-48. (doi:10.1016/j.gr.2016.02.009 <http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.gr.2016.02.009>) Articles PeerReviewed 2016 ftuglasgow https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gr.2016.02.009 2021-12-02T23:12:13Z A comprehensive petrological and geochemical dataset is reported in order to define the thermo-compositional characteristics of Ti (Fe)-enriched picrite-basalt lavas (HT2, TiO2 3-7 wt%), erupted close to the axial zone of the inferred Afar mantle plume, at the centre of the originally continuous Ethiopian-Yemeni CFB plateau (ca. 30Ma) which is zonally arranged with progressively lower Ti basalts (HT1, TiO2 2-4 wt%; LT, TiO2 1-3 wt%) toward the periphery. Integrated petrogenetic modelling based on major and trace element analyses of bulk rocks, minerals and melt inclusions in olivines, as well as Sr-Nd-Pb-He-O isotope compositional variations enables us to make several conclusions. 1) The phase equilibria constraints indicate that HT2 primary picrites were generated at ca. 1570°C mantle potential temperatures (Tp) in the pressure range 4-5 GPa whereas the HT1 and LT primary melts formed at shallower level (< 2 to 3 GPa, Tp 1530 °C for HT1 and 1430°C for LT). Thus the Afar plume head was a thermally and compositionally zoned melting region with maximum excess temperatures of 300-350°C with respect to the ambient mantle. 2) The HT2 primary melts upwelled nearly adiabatically to the base of the continental crust (ca. 1 GPa) where fractionation of olivine, followed by clinopyroxene, led to variably differentiated picritic and basaltic magmas. 3) Trace element modelling requires that the primary HT2 melts were generated - either by fractional or batch melting (F 9-10%) - from a mixed garnet peridotite source (85%) with 15% eclogite (derived from transitional MORB protoliths included in Panafrican terranes) that has to be considered a specific Ti-Fe and incompatible element enriched component entrained by the Afar plume. 4) The LT, HT1 and HT2 lavas have 143Nd/144Nd = 0.5131-0.5128, whereas Sr-Pb isotopes are positively correlated with TiO2, varying from 87 Sr/86Sr 0.7032 and 206Pb/204Pb 18.2 in LT basalts to 87Sr/86Sr 0.7044 and 206Pb/204Pb 19.4 in HT2 picrite-basalts. High 3He/4He (15-20 RA) ratios are exclusively observed in HT2 lavas, confirming earlier evidence that these magmas require a component of deep mantle in addition to eclogite, while the LT basalts may more effectively reflect the signature of the pre-existing mantle domains. The comparison between high-MgO (13-22%) lavas from several Phanerozoic CFB provinces (Karoo, Paranà-Etendeka, Emeishan, Siberia, Deccan, North Atlantic Province) shows that they share extremely high mantle potential temperatures (Tp 1550-1700°C) supporting the view that hot mantle plumes are favoured candidates for triggering many LIPs. However, the high incompatible element and isotopic variability of these high-MgO lavas (and associated CFB) suggest that plume thermal anomalies are not necessarily accompanied by significant and specific chemical effects, which depend on the nature of mantle materials recycled during the plume rise, as well as by the extent of related mantle enrichments (if any) on the pre-existing lithospheric section. Article in Journal/Newspaper North Atlantic Siberia University of Glasgow: Enlighten - Publications Gondwana Research 34 29 48