4.7 Article

238U-230Th disequilibrium in recent basalts and dynamic melting beneath the Kenya rift

Journal

CHEMICAL GEOLOGY
Volume 234, Issue 1-2, Pages 148-168

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.chemgeo.2006.05.002

Keywords

U-series; trace elements; basalts; Kenya rift; melt generation

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Trace element and U-series isotope analyses are presented for a suite of recent (< 10 ka) basalts from the axial portion of the Kenya rift. Samples from throughout the rift have LREE-enriched patterns with HREF > 10 x chondrite and the LREE between 60 and 200 x chondrite. REE fractionation is consistent with melting a garnet lherzolite source region with between 2% and 6% modal garnet. Other trace element ratios are distinct from OIB, notably Zr/Hf which ranges from 43 to 48, whilst at a given Zr content the Zr/Hf ratio is significantly greater than that found in OIB. (U-238/Th-232) range from 0.362 to 1.036, (Th-230/Th-232) from 0.503 to 1.109, With (Th-230/U-238) ranging from 0.783 to 2.966. All but two samples are in Th-230 excess or in secular equilibrium. Samples with elevated (U-238/Th-232), also have Rb/Cs > 120, but unexceptional Pb-208*/Pb-206* and hence kappa(Pb) values. These samples have experienced U and Cs loss and are excluded from further consideration. Of the unaltered samples, all have (U-238/Th-232) generally lower than OIB, with maximum values of < 0.8, and some < 0.6. The maximum (Th-230/U-238) is 1.39, similar to OIB. Although none of the basalts has a primary composition, (Th-230/U-238) does not vary systematically with indices of firactionation, and comparison with evolved rocks from Kenya indicates that U-238-Th-230 disequilibrium in the basalts is not the product of fractionation and crustal residence, but a product of melt generation. The maximum (Th-230/U-238) that can be generated by batch melting, assuming a source mineralogy consistent with the REE variation is 1.05 and so the variation in (Th-230/U-238) is attributed to more complex models of melt generation and/or transport. Both dynamic melting and equilibrium porous flow suggest mantle upwelling rates of <= 2 cm year(-1). It is suggested that the Kenya basalts represent melts derived from lithospheric mantle that has been thermally reactivated by and incorporated into the underlying (East African) mantle plume. (c) 2006 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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