Delta11B as tracer of slab dehydration and mantle evolution in western Anatolia cenozoic magmatism.
Academic Article
Publication Date:
2005
abstract:
Boron isotope data are presented for Cenozoic Western Anatolia rocks, which define two main associations: (i) calc-alkaline, shoshonitic and ultra-potassic rocks (Early to Middle Miocene); and (ii) Late Miocene–Quaternary intraplate alkali basalts. Boron data, together with Sr-Nd isotope and other trace elements, are consistent with a progressive dehydration of the slab, producing fluid phases gradually depleted in B (and 11B). These fluids were added to the supraslab mantle, triggering a partial melting that gave rise to orogenic magmatism. The stretching and tearing of the slab caused by the faster convergence of Greece over Africa with respect to Anatolia facilitated an interaction of the upwelling subslab asthenosphere with residual slab-fluids during the Late Miocene followed by production of typical intraplate magmas during the Pleistocene–Holocene, whose relatively high delta11B (approximately -2 ) is considered representative of the local asthenosphere not affected by subduction contamination.
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
boron isotope; mantle evolution; geodynamics; Turkey
List of contributors:
Agostini, Samuele; Tonarini, Sonia
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