4.7 Article Proceedings Paper

Origins of non-equilibrium lithium isotopic fractionation in xenolithic peridotite minerals: Examples from Tanzania

Journal

CHEMICAL GEOLOGY
Volume 258, Issue 1-2, Pages 17-27

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.chemgeo.2008.07.015

Keywords

Lithium isotopes; Li diffusion; Isotopic disequilibrium; Kinetic isotope fractionation; Subsolidus Li redistribution; Metasomatism; Magma residence; Peridotite xenolith

Ask authors/readers for more resources

Olivine, clinopyroxene and orthopyroxene in variably metasomatised peridotite xenoliths from three lithospheric mantle sections beneath the East African Rift in Tanzania (Lashaine, Olmani, Labait) show systematic differences in their average Li concentrations (2.4 ppm, 2.0 ppm and 1.5 ppm, respectively) and intermineral isotopic fractionations, with olivine being heaviest (delta Li-7=+2.3 to +13.9 parts per thousand, average +5.0 parts per thousand), followed by orthopyroxene (-4.1 to + 6.5 parts per thousand, average + 0.8 parts per thousand) and clinopyroxene (-6.7 to +4.1 parts per thousand, average - 1.6 parts per thousand). These features are ascribed to the effects of kinetic Li isotope fractionation combined with different Li diffusivities in mantle minerals. Two main mechanisms likely generate diffusion-driven kinetic Li isotope fractionation in mantle xenoliths (1) Li diffusion from grain boundary melt into minerals during recent metasomatism or entrainment in the host magma and (2) subsolidus intermineral Li-redistribution. The latter can produce both isotopically light (Li-addition) and heavy (Li-loss) minerals and may occur in response to changes in pressure and/or temperature. Modelling shows that non-mantle-like delta(7) Li in clinopyroxene (<+2 parts per thousand), combined with apparent equilibrium olivine-clinopyroxene elemental partitioning in most peridotite xenoliths from all three Tanzanian localities probably reflects incipient Li addition during interaction with the host magma. Low delta(7) Li (<-3 parts per thousand), combined with high Li concentrations (>3 ppm) in some clinopyroxene may require very recent(minutes) Li ingress from a Li-rich melt (100s of ppm) having mantle-like delta(7) Li. This might happen during late fragmentation of some mantle xenoliths caused by a volatile- (and Li-) rich component exsolved from the host basalt. In contrast, high Li concentrations (>2 ppm) and 67 Li (>4 parts per thousand) in olivine from many Labait and Olmani samples are attributed to ail older, pre-entrainment enrichment event during which isotopic equilibrium was attained and whose signature was not corrupted during xenolith entrainment. Low Li concentrations and mantle-like isotopic composition of olivine from most Lashaine xenoliths indicate limited metasomatic Li addition. Thus, Li concentrations and isotope compositions of mantle peridotites worldwide may reflect two processes, with olivine mainly preserving a signature of depletion in refractory samples (low Li contents and delta(7) Li) or of older (precursory) melt addition in metasomatised samples (high Li contents and delta(7) Li), while non mantle-like, low delta Li-7 in almost all clinopyroxene can be due to Li ingress during transport in the host magma and/or slow cooling, if the samples were erupted in lavas. In Tanzania, the peridotites experienced rift-related heating prior to entrainment and were quenched upon eruption, so Li ingress is the most likely process responsible for the isotopically light clinopyroxene here. (C) 2008 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.7
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available