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Melting of a hydrous peridotite mantle source under the Emeishan large igneous province

Journal

EARTH-SCIENCE REVIEWS
Volume 207, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.earscirev.2020.103253

Keywords

Mantle plume; Peridotite; Pyroxenite; Olivine composition; Melt inclusion

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [41903035, 41530211]
  2. State Administration of Foreign Expert Affairs of China (111 Project) [BP0719022]
  3. MOST Special Fund from the State Key Laboratory of Geological Processes and Mineral Resources (CUG) [MSFGPMR21, MSFGPMR01]
  4. China Postdoctoral Science Foundation [2019M652732]
  5. Fundamental Research Funds for the Central Universities

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Large igneous provinces on Earth result from anomalously enormous volcanic eruptions at high melt production rates. These eruptions are often linked to catastrophic events such as mass extinctions, global climate changes, or continental break-up. Decoding their petrogenesis is therefore of great importance for our comprehensive understanding of the evolution and geodynamics of our planet. The similar to 260 Ma Emeishan large igneous province is an important geological feature of SW China with world-class ore deposits and is also suggested to be linked with the Capitanian mass extinction. However, fundamental aspects of the genesis of Emeishan province's most primitive lavas (picrites), such as the source lithology (pyroxenite or peridotite), the origin of compositional variations of olivines and the melting temperature and pressure conditions, remain poorly constrained. Here, we compile information on melt inclusion and host olivine, and whole-rock compositions from the ELIP picrites and show that these data are consistent with decompression melting of a relatively homogeneous peridotitic mantle plume, with a potential temperature higher than 1560 degrees C. The compositional variability of the olivines and picrites can be explained by varying the equilibrium depth of primary magma segregation and does not require the contribution of a pyroxenite component as previously suggested. Our results favor a scenario for the origin of the Emeishan large igneous province in which the decompression melting during upwelling of a hot hydrous and oxidized mantle plume is accompanied by catastrophic lithospheric thinning. In combination with the now extensive multi-element geochemical data, our findings provide a starting point for re-evaluation of the petrogenesis models for large igneous provinces.

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