4.5 Article

Melting the hydrous, subarc mantle: the origin of primitive andesites

Journal

CONTRIBUTIONS TO MINERALOGY AND PETROLOGY
Volume 170, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00410-015-1161-4

Keywords

Subduction zone; Mantle wedge; Partial melting; Harzburgite; Experimental petrology

Funding

  1. U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Office of Basic Energy Sciences [DE-AC02-98CH10886]
  2. Directorate For Geosciences [1258876] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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This experimental study is the first comprehensive investigation of the melting behavior of an olivine + orthopyroxene +/- spinel-bearing fertile mantle (FM) composition as a function of variable pressure and water content. The fertile composition was enriched with a metasomatic slab component of <= 0.5 % alkalis and investigated from 1135 to 1470 degrees C at 1.0-2.0 GPa. A depleted lherzolite with 0.4 % alkali addition was also studied from 1225 to 1240 degrees C at 1.2 GPa. Melts of both compositions were water-undersaturated: fertile lherzolite melts contained 0-6.4 wt% H2O, and depleted lherzolite melts contained similar to 2.5 wt% H2O. H2O contents of experimental glasses are measured using electron microprobe, secondary ion mass spectrometry, and synchrotron-source reflection Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy, a novel technique for analyzing H2O in petrologic experiments. Using this new dataset in conjunction with results from previous hydrous experimental studies, a thermobarometer and a hygrometer-thermometer are presented to determine the conditions under which primitive lavas were last in equilibration with the mantle. These predictive models are functions of H2O content and pressure, respectively. A predictive melting model is also presented that calculates melt compositions in equilibrium with an olivine + orthopyroxene +/- spinel residual assemblage (harzburgite). This model quantitatively predicts the following influences of H2O on mantle lherzolite melting: (1) As melting pressure increases, melt compositions become more olivine-normative, (2) as melting extent increases, melt compositions become depleted in the normative plagioclase component, and (3) as melt H2O content increases, melts become more quartz-normative. Natural high-Mg# [molar Mg/(Mg + Fe2+)], high-MgO basaltic andesite and andesite lavas-or primitive andesites (PAs)-contain high SiO2 contents at mantle-equilibrated Mg#s. Their compositional characteristics cannot be readily explained by melting of mantle lherzolite under anhydrous conditions. This study shows that experimental melts of a FM peridotite plus the addition of alkalis reproduce the compositions of natural PAs in SiO2, Al2O3, TiO2, Cr2O3, MgO, and Na2O at 1.0-1.2 GPa and H2O contents of 0-7 wt%. Our results also suggest that PAs form under a maximum range of extents of melting from F = 0.2-0.3. The CaO contents of the melts produced are 1-5 wt% higher than the natural samples. This is not a result of a depleted source composition or of extremely high extents of melt but is potentially caused by a very low CaO content contribution from deeper in the mantle wedge.

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