Upper mantle control on the W isotope record of shallow level plume and intraplate volcanic settings

Several studies have revealed small heterogeneities in the relative abundance of 182W, the radiogenic nuclide of short-lived 182Hf (t1/2 = ∼9 Ma), in terrestrial rocks. Whereas the majority of Archean rocks display 182W excesses relative to bulk silicate Earth, many young ocean island basalts show s...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Earth and Planetary Science Letters
Main Authors: Jansen, Mike W., Tusch, Jonas, Münker, Carsten, Bragagni, Alessandro, Avanzinelli, Riccardo, Mastroianni, Filippo, Stuart, Finlay M., Kurzweil, Florian
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2022
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Online Access:http://eprints.gla.ac.uk/275643/
http://eprints.gla.ac.uk/275643/1/275643.pdf
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Summary:Several studies have revealed small heterogeneities in the relative abundance of 182W, the radiogenic nuclide of short-lived 182Hf (t1/2 = ∼9 Ma), in terrestrial rocks. Whereas the majority of Archean rocks display 182W excesses relative to bulk silicate Earth, many young ocean island basalts show small 182W deficits, in particular if they are sourced from deep-rooted mantle plumes. The origin of this anomaly is still ambiguous, proposed models focus on core-mantle interaction or the presence of reservoirs in the lower mantle that have been isolated since the Hadean. In order to evaluate the role of upper mantle reservoirs, we report the first 182W data for intraplate basalts where a deep plume origin is still debated (Ascension Island, Massif Central, Siebengebirge and Eifel) and intraplate volcanic rocks associated with either plume or subduction zone environments (Italian Magmatic Provinces) and compare them to new data for basalts that have a deep mantle plume origin (La Réunion and Baffin Island). The proto-Iceland plume basalts from Baffin Island have uniform and modern mantle-like W of around 0 despite extremely high (3He/4He). In contrast, basalts from both volcanic edifices from La Réunion span a range from modern upper mantle values to deficits as low as W = −8.8 ppm, indicating a heterogeneous source reservoir. The W in all other intraplate volcanic provinces overlap the composition of modern upper mantle to within 3 ppm. The absence of resolvable 182W anomalies in these intraplate basalts, which partially tap the lithospheric mantle, suggests that primordial components are neither present in the central and southern European lithosphere nor in the European asthenospheric reservoir (EAR). The general absence of 182W anomalies in European plume-related basalts can either be explained by a shallow mantle source or by the absence of isotopically anomalous and isolated domains in the deep mantle beneath the northern hemisphere, as also suggested by geophysical evidence.