4.7 Article

Competing effects of spreading rate, crystal fractionation and source variability on Fe isotope systematics in mid-ocean ridge lavas

Journal

SCIENTIFIC REPORTS
Volume 11, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

NATURE RESEARCH
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-021-83387-7

Keywords

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Funding

  1. ARC [FT140101062]
  2. NSF [PLR 9912162, PLR 0327591, OCE 0930487, OCE 1434452]
  3. Monash University
  4. SEAE
  5. Faculty of Science

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Two-thirds of the Earth is covered by mid-ocean ridge basalts, which show chemical diversity mainly attributed to igneous differentiation and source heterogeneity. This study reveals that basalts from the ultraslow spreading Gakkel Ridge in the Arctic Ocean are driven to heavier iron isotope compositions through partial melting processes, contrasting with fast spreading ridges.
Two-thirds of the Earth is covered by mid-ocean ridge basalts, which form along a network of divergent plate margins. Basalts along these margins display a chemical diversity, which is consequent to a complex interplay of partial mantle melting in the upper mantle and magmatic differentiation processes in lower crustal levels. Igneous differentiation (crystal fractionation, partial melting) and source heterogeneity, in general, are key drivers creating variable chemistry in mid-ocean ridge basalts. This variability is reflected in iron isotope systematics (expressed as delta Fe-57), showing a total range of 0.2 parts per thousand from delta Fe-57=+0.05 to+0.25 parts per thousand. Respective contributions of source heterogeneity and magma differentiation leading to this diversity, however, remain elusive. This study investigates the iron isotope systematics in basalts from the ultraslow spreading Gakkel Ridge in the Arctic Ocean and compares them to existing data from the fast spreading East Pacific Rise ridge. Results indicate that Gakkel lavas are driven to heavier iron isotope compositions through partial melting processes, whereas effects of igneous differentiation are minor. This is in stark contrast to fast spreading ridges showing reversed effects of near negligible partial melting effects followed by large isotope fractionation along the liquid line of descent. Gakkel lavas further reveal mantle heterogeneity that is superimposed on the igneous differentiation effects, showing that upper mantle Fe isotope heterogeneity can be transmitted into erupting basalts in the absence of homogenisation processes in sub-oceanic magma chambers.

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