4.5 Article

The distribution and abundance of halogens in eclogites: An in situ SIMS perspective of the Raspas Complex (Ecuador)

Journal

AMERICAN MINERALOGIST
Volume 105, Issue 3, Pages 307-318

Publisher

MINERALOGICAL SOC AMER
DOI: 10.2138/am-2020-6994

Keywords

Eclogite; halogens; subduction; SIMS; nominally anhydrous minerals; HIMU; Halogens in Planetary Bodies

Funding

  1. NSF award EAR-PG [1524311, 1839128]
  2. WHOI Ocean Venture Fund
  3. NSF-PIRE grant [OIA-1545903]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

We present in situ secondary ion mass spectrometry (SIMS) and electron microprobe analyses of coexisting garnet, omphacite, phengite, amphibole, and apatite, combined with pyrohydrolysis bulk-rock analyses to constrain the distribution, abundance, and behavior of halogens (F and Cl) in six MORB-like eclogites from the Raspas Complex (Southern Ecuador). In all cases concerning lattice-hosted halogens, F compatibility decreases from apatite (1.47-3.25 wt%), to amphibole (563-4727 mu g/g), phengite (610-1822 mu g/g), omphacite (6.5-54.1 mu g/g), and garnet (1.7-8.9 mu g/g). The relative compatibility of Cl in the assemblage is greatest for apatite (192-515 mu g/g), followed by amphibole (0.64-82.7 mu g/g), phengite (1.2-2.1 mu g/g), omphacite (<0.05-1.0 mu g/g), and garnet (<0.05 mu g/g). Congruence between SIMS-reconstructed F bulk abundances and yield-corrected bulk pyrohydrolysis analyses indicates that F is primarily hosted within the crystal lattice of eclogitic minerals. However, SIMS-reconstructed Cl abundances are a factor of five lower, on average, than pyrohydrolysis-derived bulk concentrations. This discrepancy results from the contribution of fluid inclusions, which may host at least 80% of the bulk rock Cl. The combination of SIMS and pyrohydrolysis is highly complementary. Whereas SIMS is well suited to determine bulk F abundances, pyrohydrolysis better quantifies bulk Cl concentrations, which include the contribution of fluid inclusion-hosted Cl. Raspas eclogites contain 145-258 mu g/g F and at least 7-11 mu g/g Cl. We estimate that similar to 95% of F is retained in the slab through eclogitization and returned to the upper mantle during subduction, whereas at least 95% of subducted Cl is removed from the rock by the time the slab equilibrates at eclogite facies conditions. Our calculations provide further evidence for the fractionation of F from Cl during high-pressure metamorphism in subduction zones. Although the HIMU (high U/Pb) mantle source (dehydrated oceanic crust) is often associated with enrichments in Cl/K and F/Nd, Raspas eclogites show relatively low halogen ratios identical within uncertainty to depleted MORB mantle (DMM). Thus, the observed halogen enrichments in HIMU ocean island basalts require either further fractionation during mantle processing or recycling of a halogen-enriched carrier lithology such as serpentinite into the mantle.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.5
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available