4.7 Review

Hotspot volcanism and highly siderophile elements

Journal

CHEMICAL GEOLOGY
Volume 341, Issue -, Pages 50-74

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.chemgeo.2012.12.010

Keywords

Highly siderophile elements; Osmium isotopes; Hotspot volcanism; Mantle geochemistry; Ocean island basalt; Continental flood basalt

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [EAR-1116089]
  2. National Air and Space Administration [NNX11AG34G, NNX12AH75G]
  3. San Diego Foundation [C-2011-00204]
  4. National Geographic Society [GEFNE28-11]
  5. Directorate For Geosciences
  6. Division Of Earth Sciences [1116089] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Hotspot volcanic rocks are formed under conditions that differ from conventional plate tectonic boundary magmatic processes and are compositionally distinct from mid-oceanic ridge basalts. Hotspot volcanic rocks include - but are not limited to - ocean island basalts (OIB), continental flood basalts (CFB), komatiites, oceanic plateau and some intraplate alkaline volcanic rocks. Studies of the highly siderophile element (HSE) geochemistry of hotspot volcanic rocks have provided new perspectives into mantle convection, mantle heterogeneity, core-mantle interactions, crustal and mantle lithospheric recycling, melting processes and crust-mantle interactions. The HSE, comprising Os, Ir, Ru, Rh, Pt, Pd, Re and Au, have strong affinities for metal and sulphide relative to silicate. These elements also have variable partitioning behaviour between highly compatible Os, Ir, Ru and Rh relative to compatible Pt and Pd and to moderately incompatible Re and Au during melting and crystallisation. This exceptional geochemical behaviour, combined with the existence of the long-lived Re-187-Os-187 and Pt-190-Os-186 decay systems embedded within the HSE, make these elements powerful tracers of processes acting on magmas and their volcanic products. The HSE can be utilised to understand sub-aerial volcanic degassing and crustal assimilation processes in hotspot volcanic rocks such as CFB and OIB, as well as for quantitative assessment of fractional crystallisation. Mantle melting studies have highlighted the strong control of sulphide in the mantle prior to exhaustion of S and generation of Os Ir Ru metal alloys at similar to>25% partial melting; a behaviour of the HSE that is fundamental to understanding terrestrial hotspot volcanism. Perhaps the most exciting utility of the HSE, however, lies in their ability to reveal both short- and long-term fractionation processes acting on hotspot volcanic sources from inter-element HSE fractionations and Os-187/Os-188-Os-186/Os-188 systematics. The growing database for HSE abundances and Os-187/Os-188 in hotspot volcanic rocks is consistent with their generation from a heterogeneous upper mantle generated by melt differentiation and recycling of crust and mantle lithosphere during plate subduction. Os-187/Os-188 variations (ratios up to 0.175) in high-Os abundance (>50 ppt) HIMU (high U-238/Pb-206) OIB indicate high long-term (>1 to 2 Ga) Re/Os, supporting models for recycled oceanic lithosphere in the source of these volcanic rocks. In contrast, and despite elevated Sr-87/Sr-88 and low Nd-143/Nd-144, enriched mantle (EM) OIB can have Os-187/Os-188 that dominantly reflect contributions from peridotite with only minor contributions from recycled sediment or continental crust and/or lithospheric mantle materials. The HSE provide geochemical evidence for how lithological and chemical heterogeneities are sampled within the mantle. Modeling of HSE abundances and Os isotopes show that large apparent recycled contributions (50% to 90%) in some OIB can be explained by the preferential melting of volumetrically minor (<10%) pyroxenite in their sources. Preferential melting of more fusible materials in the mantle also explains why low-degree partial melts, such as alkali basalts and basanites, may exhibit more extreme isotopic variations than tholeiites or komatiites, which likely contain a higher contribution from peridotite in a hybridised pyroxenite-peridotite mantle source. High-precision Os-188/Os-188 data for hotspot volcanism are limited, but the combined variations in long-term Re/Os and Pt/Os retained in some mantle sources may reflect either the long-term fractionation of Re and Pt from Os between the inner and outer core, or ancient sulphide segregation and lithological variations in the mantle caused by convection but unrelated to core-mantle interaction. Either mode-of-origin is important for a firmer understanding of processes occurring in Earth, and both suggest that some hotspot volcanic mantle sources have been isolated and have evolved with supra-chondritic Pt/Os over >2 to 3 Ga time-scales. Study of the HSE in hotspot volcanic rocks from Solar System bodies also informs on planetary-scale processes, indicating that Earth, the Moon, Mars and fully differentiated asteroids all have HSE abundances in their mantles that are higher than expected from low-pressure metal-silicate partitioning. Furthermore, the HSE are in broadly chondritic-relative abundances for these planetary bodies, at similar to 0.0002 (Moon), to similar to 0.007 (Mars), to similar to 0.009 (Earth) x carbonaceous chondrite Ivuna (CI) composition. The timing of addition of the HSE to planetary bodies preserved in their magmas and volcanic products is consistent with Solar-System-wide late accretion no later than 3.8 Ga for Earth, and even earlier based on evidence from the Moon (similar to 4.4 Ga), Mars (similar to 4.5 Ga) and asteroids (>4.56 Ga). (C) 2013 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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