4.6 Article

Tectonic origin of serpentinites on Syros, Greece: Geochemical signatures of abyssal origin preserved in a HP/LT subduction complex

Journal

LITHOS
Volume 296, Issue -, Pages 352-364

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.lithos.2017.10.020

Keywords

Serpentinite; Syros; Cycladic Blueschist unit; Trace element; Stable isotope

Funding

  1. NSF [EAR-1250470, EAR-1250497]
  2. Mineralogical Society of America's Student Research Grant in Mineralogy and Petrology
  3. University of Texas at Austin Undergraduate Research Fellowship

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This study combines whole rock trace and major element geochemistry, and stable isotope (delta D and delta O-18) analyses with petrographic observations to deduce the origin and tectonic setting of serpentinization of ultramafic blocks from the exhumed HP/LT Aegean subduction complex on Syros, Greece. Samples are completely serpentinized and are characterized by mineral assemblages that consist of variable amounts of serpentine, talc, chlorite, and magnetite. delta D and delta O-18 values of bulk rock serpentinite powders and chips (delta D = -64 to -33 parts per thousand and delta O-18 = + 5.2 to +9.0 parts per thousand) reflect hydration by seawater at temperatures <250 degrees C in an oceanic setting pre-subduction, or by fluids derived from dehydrating altered oceanic crust during subduction. Fluid-mobile elements corroborate the possibility of initial serpentinization by seawater, followed by secondary fluid-rock interactions with a sedimentary source pre- or syn-subduction. Whole rock major element, trace element, and REE analyses record limited melt extraction, exhibit flat REE patterns, and do not show pronounced Eu anomalies. The geochemical signatures preserved in these serpentinites argue against a mantle wedge source, as has been previously speculated for ultramafic rocks on Syros. Rather, the data are consistent with derivation from abyssal peridotites in a hyper-extended margin setting or mid-ocean ridge and fracture zone environment. In either case, the data suggest an extensional and/or oceanic origin associated with the Cretaceous opening of the Pindos Ocean and not a subduction-related derivation from the mantle wedge. (C) 2017 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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