Boron and oxygen isotope evidence for recycling of subducted components over the past 2.5 Gyr.
Academic Article
Publication Date:
2007
abstract:
Evidence for the deep recycling of surficial materials through the
Earth's mantle and their antiquity has long been sought to understand
the role of subducting plates and plumes in mantle convection.
Radiogenic isotope evidence for such recycling remains
equivocal because the age and location of parent-daughter fractionation
are not known. Conversely, while stable isotopes can
provide irrefutable evidence for low-temperature fractionation,
their range in most unaltered oceanic basalts is limited and the
age of any variation is unconstrained. Here we show that d18O
ratios in basalts from the Azores are often lower than in pristine
mantle. This, combined with increased Nb/B ratios and a large
range in d11B ratios, provides compelling evidence for the recycling
of materials that had undergone fractionation near the Earth's
surface. Moreover, d11B is negatively correlated with 187Os/188Os
ratios, which extend to subchondritic values1, constraining the age
of the high Nb/B, 11B-enriched endmember to be more than
2.5 billion years (Gyr) old. We infer this component to be meltand
fluid-depleted lithospheric mantle from a subducted oceanic
plate, whereas other Azores basalts contain a contribution from
3-Gyr-old melt-enriched basalt2. We conclude that both components
are most probably derived from an Archaean oceanic plate
that was subducted, arguably into the deep mantle, where it was
stored until thermal buoyancy caused it to rise beneath the Azores
islands 3 Gyr later.
Iris type:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
Boron; oxygen; subducted components; azores
List of contributors:
Tonarini, Sonia
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