4.5 Article

Magmatic Evolution and Source Variations at the Nifonea Ridge (New Hebrides Island Arc)

Journal

JOURNAL OF PETROLOGY
Volume 58, Issue 3, Pages 473-494

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/petrology/egx023

Keywords

New Hebrides island arc; back-arc melting; mantle heterogeneity; Nb-enriched basalts

Funding

  1. German Bundesministerium fur Bildung und Forschung (BMBF) [03G 0229]

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The Nifonea submarine volcano rises 1000 m above the seafloor of the Vate Trough back-arc basin behind the New Hebrides island arc. This large volcanic edifice has a caldera of similar to 8 km diameter and is connected to two similar to 20 km long volcanic rift zones in the back-arc basin. We present new chemical and isotope data for volcanic glasses and whole-rocks from both the volcano and its rift zones. Lavas from Nifonea volcano show an evolution towards more incompatible element enrichment, with the most enriched lavas being the youngest eruption products on the caldera floor. These are products of significant fractional crystallization, show minor contamination by hydrothermal fluids (< 0 center dot 3%) and reflect mixing of melts derived from depleted upper mantle and melts from an enriched source similar to those occurring in the North Fiji Basin. The enrichment in Nb of these lavas is comparable with that of some lavas from the New Hebrides island arc (e.g. Mota Lava island), where these coexist with typical island arc basalts. The lavas erupted along the rift zones in the Vate Trough back-arc basin are relatively depleted in incompatible elements, indicating melting of depleted upper mantle with a minor addition of a sediment-derived fluid. Our observations suggest that the mantle beneath Vate Trough is heterogeneous on a small scale (< 20 km) and that the occurrence of these enriched and fertile mantle portions has a stronger control on melting processes than the influx from the subducting slab, as all samples were recovered at a similar distance from the trench.

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