4.7 Article

Carbon fluxes from subducted carbonates revealed by uranium excess at Mount Vesuvius, Italy

Journal

GEOLOGY
Volume 46, Issue 3, Pages 259-262

Publisher

GEOLOGICAL SOC AMER, INC
DOI: 10.1130/G39766.1

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Funding

  1. Marie Curie postdoctoral fellowship [025136-OIBH2O]
  2. MIUR (Ministero dell'Istruzione dell'Universita e della Ricerca) Rientro dei Cervelli program
  3. Progetti di Ricerca di Interesse Nazionale grants [2010TT22SC_001, 20158A9CBM, 2015EC9PJ5]
  4. NERC [NE/H023933/1, NE/M000419/1] Funding Source: UKRI

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The fate of carbonate-rich sediments recycled at destructive plate margins is a key issue for constraining the budget of deep CO2 supplied to the atmosphere by volcanism. Experimental studies have demonstrated that metasomatic melts can be generated by partial melting of subducted carbonate-pelitic sediments, but signatures of the involvement of such components in erupted magmas are more elusive. We have made new U-Th disequilibria, Sr-Nd-Pb isotope, and high-precision delta U-238 analyses on lavas from Mount Vesuvius (Italy) and show that their measured U-238 excesses require a mantle source affected by the addition of U-rich carbonated melts, generated by partial melting of subducted calcareous sediments in the presence of residual epidote. Accordingly, we argue that the occurrence of U-238 excesses in sediment-dominated arc magmas represents diagnostic evidence of addition of carbonate sediments via subduction, hence providing constraints on deep carbon cycling within Earth. Our quantitative enrichment model, combined with published experimental results, allows us to estimate a resulting flux of 0.15-0.8 Mt/yr CO2 from the subducted carbonates to the mantle source of Mount Vesuvius.

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