4.6 Article

Melting of the subcontinental lithospheric mantle by the Emeishan mantle plume; evidence from the basal alkaline basalts in Dongchuan, Yunnan, Southwestern China

Journal

LITHOS
Volume 100, Issue 1-4, Pages 93-111

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.lithos.2007.06.023

Keywords

Emeishan flood basalts; tephrite; metasomatized subcontinental lithospheric mantle; partial melting; mantle plume

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The Emeishan continental flood basalt (ECFB) sequence in Dongchuan, SW China comprises a basal tephrite unit overlain by an upper tholeiitic basalt unit. The upper basalts have high TiO2 contents (3.2-5.2 wt.%), relatively high rare-earth element (REE) concentrations (40 to 60 ppm La, 12.5 to 16.5 ppm Sm, and 3 to 4 ppm Yb), moderate Zr/Nb and Nb/La ratios (9.3-10.2 and 0.6-0.9, respectively) and relatively high epsilon(Nd) ((t)) values, ranging from - 0.94 to 2.3, and are comparable to the high-Ti ECFB elsewhere. The tephrites have relatively high P2O5 (1.3-2.0 wt.%), low REE concentrations (e.g., 17 to 23 ppm La, 4 to 5.3 ppm Sm, and 2 to 3 ppm Yb), high Nb/La (2.0-3.9) ratios, low Zr/Nb ratios (2.3-4.2), and extremely low epsilon(Nd) (t) values (mostly ranging from - 10.6 to - 11.1). The distinct compositional differences between the tephrites and the overlying tholeiitic basalts cannot be explained by either fractional crystallization or crustal contamination of a common parental magma. The tholeiitic basalts formed by partial melting of the Emeishan plume head at a depth where garnet was stable, perhaps >80 km. We propose that the tephrites were derived from magmas formed when the base of the previously metasomatized, volatile-mineral bearing subcontinental lithospheric mantle was heated by the upwelling mantle plume. (c) 2007 Published by Elsevier B.V.

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