Chromium spinel in Late Quaternary volcanic rocks from Kamchatka: Implications for spatial compositional variability of subarc mantle and its oxidation state

The Kamchatka volcanic arc (Russia) is one of well-studied but complex tectonic margins on Earth, with an extensive geologic history stretching as far back as the Late Cretaceous. Unlike many other subduction zones, primitive basalts with Mg# > 65 are abundant in Kamchatka, thereby allowing chara...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Lithos
Main Authors: Nekrylov, N, Portnyagin, MV, Kamenetsky, VS, Mironov, NL, Churikova, TG, Plechov, PY, Abersteiner, A, Gorbach, NV, Gordeychik, BN, Krasheninnikov, SP, Tobelko, DP, Shur, MY, Tetroeva, SA, Volynets, AO, Hoernle, K, Worner, G
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Elsevier Science Bv 2018
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Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1016/j.lithos.2018.10.011
http://ecite.utas.edu.au/128914
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Summary:The Kamchatka volcanic arc (Russia) is one of well-studied but complex tectonic margins on Earth, with an extensive geologic history stretching as far back as the Late Cretaceous. Unlike many other subduction zones, primitive basalts with Mg# > 65 are abundant in Kamchatka, thereby allowing characterization of the mantle source through compositional analyses of near-liquidus minerals in the rocks. In this paper, we present a comprehensive dataset on the composition of Cr-spinel inclusions in olivine for all main Late Quaternary volcanic zones in Kamchatka, comprising of analyses of 1604 spinel inclusions and their host-olivine from 104 samples representing 30 volcanoes and volcanic fields. The studied rocks are basalts, basaltic andesites and high-Mg andesites, which cover the whole compositional range the Late Quaternary primitive volcanic rocks in Kamchatka. The composition of spinel shows large variability. Spinel inclusions with the lowest Cr# and Fe 3+ /Fe 2+ ratios were found in basalts from Sredinny Range and Northern Kamchatka,whereas the most Cr-rich and oxidized spinel inclusions occur in basalts and high-Mgandesites from the Central Kamchatka Depression. Intermediate Cr-spinel compositions characterize the Eastern Volcanic Belt of Kamchatka. The compositions of olivine-spinel pairs were used to quantify the oxidation state of parental Kamchatka magmas and the degree of partial mantle melting. The redox conditions recorded in spinel compositions range from ΔQFM = +0.7 to +3.7. ΔQFM for samples from the Sredinny Range and Northern Kamchatka correlates with a number of proxies of the involvement of slab-derived components incorporated in the composition of their host-rocks (e.g., La/Nb and Ba/La), which suggests a coupling between the mantle oxidation and metasomatism by slab-derived fluids or melts. These correlations were not observed for frontal Kamchatka volcanoes with the highest estimated ΔQFM, which possibly indicates a buffering of the mantle oxidation state by sulfur. The estimated degrees of partial mantle melting range from 8 to > 20% for Kamchatka volcanoes. Spinel from the Central Kamchatka Depression has the highest Cr# and could crystallize from magmas generated from the most depleted sources. In contrast to the Eastern Volcanic Belt, spinel Cr# and the inferred degrees of melting in the Central Kamchatka Depression do not correlate with spinel TiO 2 content. The apparent decoupling between the proxies of mantle depletion in the CKD spinel is interpreted to reflect refertilization of the CKD mantle by oxidized Ti-rich slab- or mantle lithosphere-derived melts near the northern edge of the subducting Pacific Plate. This study demonstrates that the composition of Cr-spinelin volcanic rocks in combination with bulk-rock compositions can be a powerful tool to map regional variations of the mantle source depletion, oxidation state, and involvement of various slab derived components in island-arc magmatism.