4.7 Article

Melting processes and mantle sources of lavas on Mercury

Journal

EARTH AND PLANETARY SCIENCE LETTERS
Volume 439, Issue -, Pages 117-128

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.epsl.2016.01.030

Keywords

MESSENGER; volcanism; phase equilibria; equilibrium melting; sulfur

Funding

  1. von Humboldt Foundation
  2. Marie Curie Intra-European Fellowship (SULFUR-ONMERCURY) within the 7th European Community Framework Programme [327046]
  3. Back to Belgium Grant of BELSPO
  4. BRAIN-be program [BR/143/A2/COME-IN]
  5. NASA grant [NNX12AH80G]
  6. DFG from the German Science Foundation

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The MESSENGER spacecraft provided geochemical data for surface rocks on Mercury. In this study, we use the major element composition of these lavas to constrain melting conditions and residual mantle sources on Mercury. We combine modelling and high-temperature (1320-1580 degrees C), low- to high-pressure (0.1 to 3 GPa) experiments on average compositions for the Northern Volcanic Plains (NVP) and the high-Mg region of the Intercrater Plains and Heavily Cratered Terrains (High-Mg IcP-HCT). Near-liquidus phase relations show that the S-free NVP and High-Mg IcP-HCT compositions are multiply saturated with forsterite and enstatite at 1450 degrees C - 1.3 GPa and 1570 degrees C - 1.7 GPa, respectively. For S-saturated melts (1.5-3 wt.% S), the multiple saturation point (MSP) is shifted to 1380 degrees C - 0.75 GPa for NVP and 1480 degrees C - 0.8 GPa for High-Mg IcP-HCT. To expand our experimental results to the range of surface compositions, we used and calibrated the pMELTS thermodynamic calculator and estimated phase equilibria of similar to 5800 compositions from the Mercurian surface and determined the P-T conditions of liquid-forsterite-enstatite MSP (1300-1600 degrees C; 0.25-1.25 GPa). Surface basalts were produced by 10 to 50% partial melting of variably enriched lherzolitic mantle sources. The relatively low pressure of the olivine-enstatite-liquid MSP seems most consistent with decompression batch melting and melts being segregated from their residues near the base of Mercury's ancient lithosphere. The average melting degree is lower for the young NVP (0.27 +/- 0.04) than for the older IcP-HCT (0.46 +/- 0.02), indicating that melt productivity decreased with time. The mantle potential temperature required to form Mercurian lavas and the initial depth of melting also decreased from the older High-Mg IcP-HCT terrane (1650 degrees C and 360 km) to the younger lavas covering the NVP regions (1410 degrees C and 160 km). This evolution supports strong secular cooling of Mercury's mantle between 4.2 and 3.7 Ga and explains why very little magmatic activity occurred after 3.7 Ga. (C) 2016 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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