4.7 Article

Is the Iceland hot spot also wet?: Evidence from the water contents of undegassed submarine and subglacial pillow basalts

Journal

EARTH AND PLANETARY SCIENCE LETTERS
Volume 202, Issue 1, Pages 77-87

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/S0012-821X(02)00758-6

Keywords

Iceland; Reykjanes Ridge; subglacial basaltic glasses; volcanic glass; water content

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Water contents have been measured in basaltic glasses from submarine and subglacial eruption sites along the Reykjanes Ridge and Iceland, respectively, in order to evaluate the hypothesis of Schilling et al. [Phil. Trans, R. Soc. London A 56 (1980) 147-178] that hot spots are also wet spots. Having erupted under pressure the water contents measured in these samples are potentially unaffected by degassing. After correcting these water contents for the effects of crystallisation (to give H2O(8) values) they indicate that the concentration of water in the source regions increases from 165 ppm at the southern end of the Reykjanes Ridge to between 620 and 920 ppm beneath Iceland. This suggests that Iceland is a wet spot and the H2O(8) values indicate that its influence on basalt compositions increases northwards along the Reykjanes Ridge from similar to61degreesN (650 km from the plume centre) towards Iceland. The existence of wetter Icelandic source regions have important implications for mantle melting, as enrichments of this magnitude depress the mantle solidus, increasing the degree of melting at a given temperature, Therefore the enhanced rates of volcanism on Iceland may be a result of wetter sources in addition to a thermal anomaly beneath Iceland. (C) 2002 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.

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