210Pb-226 Ra disequilibria in young gas-laden magmas

We present new U- Th- Ra- Pb and supporting data for young lavas from southwest Pacific island arcs, Eyjafjallajökull, Iceland, and Terceira, Azores. The arc lavas have significant U and Ra excesses, whereas those from the ocean islands have moderate Th and Ra excesses, reflecting mantle melting in...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Scientific Reports
Main Authors: Reagan, Mark, Turner, Simon, Handley, Heather, Turner, Michael, Beier, Christoph, Caulfield, John, Peate, David
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Nature Publishing Group 2017
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Online Access:https://espace.library.uq.edu.au/view/UQ:55854d7
Description
Summary:We present new U- Th- Ra- Pb and supporting data for young lavas from southwest Pacific island arcs, Eyjafjallajökull, Iceland, and Terceira, Azores. The arc lavas have significant U and Ra excesses, whereas those from the ocean islands have moderate Th and Ra excesses, reflecting mantle melting in the presence of a water-rich fluid in the former and mantle melting by decompression in the latter. Differentiation to erupted compositions in both settings appears to have taken no longer than a few millennia. Variations in the (Pb/Ra) 0 values in all settings largely result from degassing processes rather than mineral-melt partitioning. Like most other ocean island basalts, the Terceira basalt has a 210 Pb deficit, which we attribute to ∼8.5 years of steady Rn loss to a CO-rich volatile phase while it traversed the crust. Lavas erupted from water-laden magma systems, including those investigated here, commonly have near equilibrium (Pb/Ra) 0 values. Maintaining these equilibrium values requires minimal persistent loss or accumulation of Rn in a gas phase. We infer that degassing during decompression of water-saturated magmas either causes these magmas to crystallize and stall in reservoirs where they reside under conditions of near stasis, or to quickly rise towards the surface and erupt.