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Composition and Significance of Mariana Trough Basalts

Composition and Significance of Mariana Trough Basalts. Julian Pearce (Cardiff). Composition and Significance of Mariana Trough Basalts. with contributions from: Bob Stern (Dallas) Sherman Bloomer (Corvallis) Patty Fryer (Honolulu) Jon Woodhead (Melbourne). The Mariana Trough Setting.

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Composition and Significance of Mariana Trough Basalts

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  1. Composition and Significance of Mariana Trough Basalts Julian Pearce (Cardiff)

  2. Composition and Significance of Mariana Trough Basalts with contributions from: Bob Stern (Dallas) Sherman Bloomer (Corvallis) Patty Fryer (Honolulu) Jon Woodhead (Melbourne)

  3. The Mariana Trough Setting Unzipping of island arc with maximum extension in the centre and a N-S trend of rifting to drifting

  4. Mariana Trough: A Key Locality in BABB Studies • Hart et al. (1972): First analyses of back-arc basalts • Gill (1976): First documentation of the differences between back-arc basin basalts and MORB • Hawkins (1977, 1978): First systematic sampling program for back-arc basins • Tarney et al. (1977): First discovery of island arc basalt from a back-arc basin • Garcia et al. (1979): First analysis of water in a back-arc basin glass • Fryer et al. (1981): First treatment of back-arc basin lavas as a distinct magma type • Sinton and Fryer (1987): First systematic petrogenetic interpretation of BABB • Stolper and Newman (1994): First use of BABB glasses to estimate the composition of the subduction component

  5. Mariana Trough: Type Locality of Back-arc Basin Basalts (BABB) High • Volatile Elements notably H (water) • Vesicularity • Large Ion Lithophile Elements (Ba, Sr, La, Th etc.) • Al2O3 Low • High Field Strength Elements (Nb, Zr, Y etc.) • FeO

  6. How Distinctive are Mariana BABB? SZ

  7. How Distinctive are Mariana BABB?

  8. How Distinctive are Mariana BABB? • 14% of Mariana Trough lavas are MORB • 6% of Mariana Trough lavas are IAB • 80% of Mariana Trough lavas are BABB But it is not obvious whether BABB are simply transitional between MORB and IAB or a truly distinct magma type

  9. What can the Mariana Trough Basalts tell us? • Mantle Input • 2.Subduction Input • 3. Mantle-Subduction interaction • 4. Hydrous Ridge Crest Processes • (melting, reaction & crystallization) 4 3 2 1

  10. Mantle Input • Mantle Fertility • Mantle Flow • Mantle Provenance 1

  11. Geochemical Tracing of Mantle Flow Nb/Yb decreases Loss of melt fractions during flow to the arc front causes decrease in ratios of highly to moderately incompatible elements – as shown by McCulloch, Gamble, Woodhead and others in the early 1990s. Thus Nb/Yb is a good tracer for mantle flow (provided degrees of melting are high) – Pearce (2005) 1

  12. Geochemical Tracing of Mantle Flow Lau: one-way ‘sideways’ flow Izu: corner flow Red – high Nb/Yb Blue – low Nb/Yb Mariana: multi-centre upwelling followed by along-axis and corner flow Scotia: two-way sideways flow followed by corner flow Pearce & Stern, 2006

  13. Mariana Trough Mantle Flow Consistent with mantle upwelling in several centres within the basin and complex flow pattern Pearce et al., 2005

  14. Mariana Trough Mantle Flow Pozgay et al. (2007)

  15. Mantle Provenance I I P P I P Isotopes can be used to fingerprint the mantle domain that feeds the arc-basin systems. The Mariana system is dominated by ‘Indian’ mantle sources. But are these from a closing Indian Ocean, from contamination by lithosphere, or from a sub-Pacific plume of ‘Indian’ character?

  16. Key Mantle Questions • What is the origin of the ‘Indian’ component of the Mariana Trough lavas? • How does the fertile mantle enter the Mariana Trough? • How has the mantle evolved with time since subduction started?

  17. What can the Mariana Trough Basalts tell us? • Mantle Input • 2.Subduction Input • 3. Mantle-Subduction interaction • 4. Ridge Crest Processes • (melting, reaction & crystallization) 4 3 2 1

  18. Subduction Input • Spatial Variations in the Subduction Component • Composition of the Subduction Components • Origin of the Subduction Components 2

  19. Subduction Component MappingI: Yb Normalization Normalizing to Yb, i.e. using ratios such as Nb/Yb, greatly reduces the effect of fractional crystallization and crystal cumulation

  20. Subduction Component MappingII: Splitting Patterns into Components The patterns can be broken up into components and ratios used as proxies of subduction processes

  21. Mapping Total Subduction Input Each system has a different pattern with clear relationships to subduction zone proximity and mantle flow pattern Pearce & Stern (2006)

  22. Mapping Total Subduction Input The subduction zone input in the back-arc basin is highest at the margins as the basin converges with the arc. Within the central part of the basin, there are three regions where the mantle is unaffected by subduction with subduction enrichments between them can also break this down into components Pearce et al., 2005

  23. The Lithospheric Subduction Component The Mariana region is complicated by the presence of a high Nb/Ta component that cannot easily be explained by subduction. They are globally characteristic of small degree melts, but here the degree of melting is high. We tentatively explain them in terms of enrichment of the lithosphere by small-degree melts. The lithosphere is reactivated by arc rifting. Where present, this component has to be numerically subtracted before other components can be studied

  24. Mapping the Lithosphere Subduction Component

  25. Possible Origin of the Lithosphere Component

  26. Mapping the Deep Subduction Component

  27. Mapping the Shallow Subduction Component

  28. Summary of Geochemical Mapping

  29. Subduction Component: HFSE Mobility? Pearce et al (1999): no significant Hf mobility Woodhead et al (2001): Hf and Nd both mobile HFSE immobility an important assumption for computing subduction components: so important to resolve

  30. Subduction Component: HFSE Mobility? Pearce et al (1999): no significant Hf mobility Woodhead et al (2001): Hf and Nd both mobile Green circles = new data from Woodhead et al. (in prep.)

  31. Subduction Component: HFSE mobility? Woodhead et al. (in prep.):still debated but Hf mobility likely limited.

  32. Subduction Component: HFSE mobility? The Scotia system (Barry et al., 2006) is similar, but this time rear-arc and arc edge volcanoes demonstrate clear Hf mobility by addition of an inferred melt component with low Nd/Hf. This is not evident in the Mariana system – except for the high Nb/Ta samples (not shown)

  33. Subduction Component: The Stolper and Newman Conundrum Stolper and Newman’s (1994) innovative use of water in Mariana Trough glasses to predict the subduction component, gives a component with Nd/Hf of c. 6 and Nb of 40-50 ppm, as well as high Sc. This does not match observation. The question is why?

  34. Subduction Component: The Stolper and Newman Conundrum One explanation is that least-squares methods break down when there are >2 components, some with variable composition.

  35. Key Subduction Questions • Is the ‘lithosphere’ component really derived from the sub-arc lithsophere and, if so, when and how was it introduced? • Why does the Stolper and Newman study give a major HFSE component in the aqueous component: what do the data really show? • When and how were the subduction components added to the Mariana Trough mantle source?

  36. Factors Controlling the Composition of Back-arc Basin Basalts • Mantle Input • 2.Subduction Input • 3. Mantle-Subduction interaction • 4. Ridge Crest Processes • (melting, reaction & crystallization) 4 3 2 1

  37. Mantle-Subduction Interaction • The back-arc subduction component could be by: • Incorporation of previously-enriched lithosphere. • Mixing of sub-arc and incoming mantle • Direct addition from the subduction zone • Via subduction-modified mantle melts 3 2 1

  38. Subduction Zone Input: Timing E4 fluid E8 Fretzdorff et al., 2003: Subduction component must have been added to the back-arc within 350ka. Isochron may be real but may also represent mixing of fluid and melt components (same result as Peate et al. (2001) for Valu Fa Ridge, Lau Basin A similar study is needed on the Mariana Trough

  39. Subduction Zone Input: Role of Mixing If the back-arc gets its subduction component by mixing with sub-arc mantle (the Martinez-Taylor model), why is it not simply a diluted version of the arc? It does, however, explain why back-arc basins are not more shallow

  40. Factors Controlling the Composition of Back-arc Basin Basalts • Mantle Input • 2.Subduction Input • 3. Mantle-Subduction interaction • 4. Ridge Crest Processes • (melting, reaction & crystallization) 4 3 2 1

  41. Trace Element Data Indicate Shallow Melting, and F increasing with XH20 Mariana Trough glasses plot on a spinel lherzolite melting trend, indicating shallow melting processes. The degree of melting varies (as Stolper and Newman first showed) as a function of water content. Exact calibration for F is difficult without knowing source composition, however

  42. And an Increase in F from MORB through BABB to IAT Use of Nb/Yb (the flow tracer) as well as Yb deals with variations in source composition Pearce & Stern (2006)

  43. Summary • Mantle Input • Mantle rises diapirically at points within the basin; ‘Indian’ provenance, but cause not known • 2.Subduction Input • Lithospheric signals during arc rifting; deep subduction signals between ‘diapirs’; shallow subduction signal at centre and south of arc; cool subduction (no HFSE enrichment) • 3. Mantle-subduction Interaction • No evidence yet for mixing of incoming mantle with sub-arc mantle • 4. Ridge Crest Processes • Degree of melting increases from MORB through BABB to IAT (5-30%) 4 3 2 1

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