4.7 Article

The influence of crustal recycling on the molybdenum isotope composition of the Earth's mantle

Journal

EARTH AND PLANETARY SCIENCE LETTERS
Volume 595, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.epsl.2022.117760

Keywords

Mo isotope fractionation; mantle geochemistry

Funding

  1. NERC [NE/L007428/1, NE/H023933/1]
  2. NERC studentship [NE/I528250/1]

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Several studies have shown that the Earth's upper mantle is slightly enriched in light molybdenum isotopes compared to the bulk Earth. This study provides further evidence of this sub-chondritic signature in the upper mantle through the analysis of depleted mid-ocean ridge basalts from various ocean basins. The findings suggest that this feature may be a result of molybdenum isotope fractionation during the recycling of oceanic crust.
Several studies have suggested that the Earth's upper mantle is slightly enriched in light molybdenum isotopes relative to bulk Earth, defined by chondrites, but there is no consensus on the presence of this subtle but potentially notable signature. To establish better whether or not the Mo-98/Mo-95 of Earth's upper mantle is indeed sub-chondritic, we have analysed hand-picked glasses of depleted (i.e. chondrite normalised La/Sm<1) mid-ocean ridge basalts (MORE) from the Pacific, Atlantic and Indian ocean basins. The mean Mo isotope composition of our depleted MORE relative to reference NIST SRM 3134 (delta(98)/Mo-95(NIST SRM) (3134)) is -0.22 +/- 0.03 parts per thousand (95% confidence interval, c.i.) compared to a value of -0.15 +/- 0.01 parts per thousand (95% c.i.) for bulk Earth. Our high precision analyses of the U-234/U-238 activity ratios of these samples are within uncertainty of unity, which rules out the effect of possible secondary, sea-floor processes as the dominant cause of their low delta(98)/Mo-95(NIST SRM) (3134). We further report experimental data showing that sulphide liquid has delta(98)/Mo-95(NIST SRM) (3134) 0.25 +/- 0.01 parts per thousand lower than basaltic silicate liquid at 1400 degrees C. This fractionation is too small to significantly alter the Mo isotope composition of basalts relative to their sources during melting or differentiation. Our MORE data show that resolvably sub-chondritic Mo isotope compositions are common in the upper mantle. Moreover, an appropriately weighted average delta(98)/Mo-95(NIST SRM) (3134) of depleted and enriched MORE, taken from this study and the literature, yields an estimated mantle value of -0.20 +/- 0.01 parts per thousand, indicating that the upper mantle as a whole is sub-chondritic. Since prior work demonstrates that core formation will not create a residual silicate reservoir with a sub-chondritic delta(98)/Mo-95(NIST SRM) (3134), we propose that this feature is a result of recycling oceanic crust with low delta(98)/Mo-95(NIST SRM) (3134) because of Mo isotope fractionation during subduction dehydration. Such an origin is in keeping with the subchondritic Th/U and low Ce/Pb of the depleted mantle, features which cannot be explained by simple melt extraction. We present mass balance models of the plate tectonic cycle that quantitatively illustrate that the delta(98)/Mo-95(NIST SRM) (3134) of the Earth's mantle can be suitably lowered by such oceanic crustal recycling. Our Mo isotope study adds to the notion that the depleted mantle has been substantially modified by geodynamic cycling of subduction-processed oceanic crust. (C) 2022 Published by Elsevier B.V.

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