4.7 Article

Komatiites, kimberlites, and boninites

Journal

JOURNAL OF GEOPHYSICAL RESEARCH-SOLID EARTH
Volume 108, Issue B6, Pages -

Publisher

AMER GEOPHYSICAL UNION
DOI: 10.1029/2002JB002157

Keywords

komatiite; kimberlite; boninite; petrology; geochemistry; mantle

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[1] When the mantle melts, it produces ultramafic magma if the site of melting is unusually deep, the degree of melting is unusually high, or the source is refractory. For such melting to happen, the source must be unusually hot or very rich in volatiles. Differing conditions produce a spectrum of ultramafic magma types. Komatiites form by high degrees of melting, at great depths, of an essentially anhydrous source. Barberton-type komatiites are moderately high degree melts from a particularly hot and deep source; Munro-type komatiites are very high degree melts of a slightly cooler source. Kimberlites result from low-degree melting, also at great depth, of sources rich in incompatible elements and CO2 + H2O. They become further enriched through interaction with overlying asthenospheric or lithospheric mantle. Boninites form by hydrous melting of metasomatized mantle above a subduction zone. Just like basalts, the different types of ultramafic magma, and the conditions in which they form, are readily identified using major and trace element criteria.

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