4.5 Article

The Origin of Late Cenozoic Magmatism in the South China Sea and Southeast Asia

Journal

GEOCHEMISTRY GEOPHYSICS GEOSYSTEMS
Volume 22, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1029/2021GC009686

Keywords

EM2; South China Sea seamounts; crust recycling; mantle transition zone; intraplate volcanism

Funding

  1. National Key Research and Development Project of China [2020YFA0714800]
  2. National Natural Science Foundation of China [41902044, 91428207]

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This study on the lavas from seamounts in the South China Sea confirms that late Cenozoic lavas originate from recycled young oceanic crust and sediments, with an olivine-dominated mantle source and no high-He-3/He-4 mantle plume component. Late Cenozoic magmatism may be related to upwelling instabilities from the mantle transition zone, triggered by a stagnant slab. These findings provide additional evidence for the development of global mantle heterogeneities through the storage and recycling of crustal materials near or within the mantle transition zone.
Basaltic lavas sample recycled crustal materials from their mantle source. Constraining the location and residence time of these recycled materials in the mantle is critical to understand global mantle dynamics. In this study, we present new whole-rock major and trace element abundances, Sr-Nd-Mo-Os isotopes, water contents and He isotopes of volcanic glasses, U-Pb ages of zircons, and compositions of melt inclusions, spinels and olivines from the South China Sea (SCS) seamounts lavas. These new data are compared with literature data from intraplate volcanism of similar age from Southeast (SE) Asia. The isotope data of late Cenozoic lavas from the SCS seamounts and SE Asia can be explained by mixing between enriched mantle 2 (EM2) and depleted mid-ocean ridge basalt mantle components. Our data are consistent with the EM2 signature of late Cenozoic lavas derived from recycled young oceanic crust and sediments. The compositions of olivine phenocrysts indicate an olivine-dominated (peridotitic) mantle source. There is currently no evidence for a high-He-3/He-4 mantle plume component beneath the SCS. Our results combined with geophysical data and plate reconstructions suggest that the late Cenozoic magmatism is related to the upwelling of instabilities from the mantle transition zone (MTZ) triggered by a stagnant slab. The SCS seamount lavas sample an enriched MTZ containing young recycled materials, consistent with regional past subduction. Our study provides additional evidence that storage and recycling of crustal materials in or near the MTZ is an important mechanism to develop global mantle heterogeneities sampled by intraplate volcanoes.

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