4.7 Article

Calcium isotope evidence for subduction-enriched lithospheric mantle under the northern North China Craton

Journal

GEOCHIMICA ET COSMOCHIMICA ACTA
Volume 238, Issue -, Pages 55-67

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.gca.2018.06.038

Keywords

Calcium isotopes; Peridotite; Metasomatism; Subduction; Carbonated sediments

Funding

  1. NSFC [41530211, 41125013]
  2. Ministry of Science and Technology of China [2013CB429806]
  3. State Administration of Foreign Expert Affairs of China [B07039]
  4. MOST Special Funds of the State Key Laboratory of Geological Processes and Mineral Resources [MSFGPMR01]
  5. Romanian National Science funding agency UEFISCDI [PN-III-P4-ID-PCE-2016-0127]

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The stable isotopes of calcium have tremendous potential for constraining the evolution of the mantle as well as finger-printing the recycling of carbon in the mantle via subduction. In order to better identify possible contributions of subducted carbonate-bearing materials to upper mantle heterogeneity, we present Ca isotope data for peridotite xenoliths from Fanshi, northern North China Craton. These peridotites have previously been studied for major and trace element, Sr-Nd isotopic compositions. Two metasomatic events in the lithosphere mantle caused by subduction of carbonated sediments from the Pale-Asian oceanic slab, were previously identified: the first by carbonatite melt and the second by carbonate-rich silicate melt. delta Ca-44/40 (=((Ca-44/Ca-40)(SAMPLE)/(Ca-44/Ca-40)(SRM915a )-1) x 1000) of clinopyroxenes (Cpx) in the Fanshi peridotites varies from +0.84 parts per thousand to +1.17 parts per thousand and delta Ca-44/40 of orthopyroxenes (Opx) from +0.82 parts per thousand to +1.22 parts per thousand. delta Ca-44/40 of the clinopyroxenes show a larger variation than that could be attributed to partial melting and display positive and negative trends with (La/Yb)(N )and Ti/Eu, respectively, suggesting the effect of two distinct metasomatic events. A harzburgite, modified only by the early carbonatite metasomatism, has the highest delta Ca-44/40 (+1.17 parts per thousand). The lherzolites affected by the second metasomatic melt show lower Delta Ca-44/(40)Opx(-Cpx) (=delta Ca-44/(40)Opx-delta Ca-44/(40)Cpx, -0.11 parts per thousand to 0 parts per thousand) than the un-metasomatized lherzolites (+0.11 parts per thousand to +0.24 parts per thousand), implying that the second metasomatism triggered Ca isotope disequilibrium between the clinopyroxene and co-existing orthopyroxene. This is consistent with positive trends between delta Ca-44/(40) and Sr-87/Sr-86, (La/Yb)(N) in the clinopyroxenes of the lherzolites, indicating that the second metasomatism also resulted in high delta Ca-44/(40) in the clinopyroxenes of the lherzolites (up to +1.09 parts per thousand). Furthermore, the harzburgites and lherzolites converge toward the second metasomatic event in diagrams of Sr-87/Sr-86 versus delta Ca-44/(40), suggesting an extensive effect of the second metasomatism. The heavy Ca iso-tope signature in these metasomatic clinopyroxenes applies to both first carbonatite melt and second carbonate-rich silicate melt derived from carbonated sediments (>+1.17 parts per thousand and similar to+1.09 parts per thousand, respectively). However, heavy Ca isotope composition is inconsistent with low delta Ca-44/(40) in carbonated sediments from the Paleo-Asian ocean, but could be the characteristic of an evolved sediment-derived hydrous carbonate melt. This implies significant Ca isotope fractionation during subduction of carbonated sediments. While currently there is plenty of debate regarding the exact significance of Ca isotope heterogeneity in mantle rocks, our results show at a minimum that Ca isotopes are rather heterogeneous in supra-subduction mantle rocks and could be used to deciphering mantle metasomatic models and detecting recycled crustal materials. (C) 2018 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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