4.7 Article

11B-rich fluids in subduction zones: The role of antigorite dehydration in subducting slabs and boron isotope heterogeneity in the mantle

Journal

CHEMICAL GEOLOGY
Volume 376, Issue -, Pages 20-30

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE BV
DOI: 10.1016/j.chemgeo.2014.03.015

Keywords

Boron; Isotopes; Subduction; Antigorite dehydration; Island arc volcanics; Serpentinite

Funding

  1. University of Leeds
  2. Fearnsides Fund of The Geological Society of London
  3. EU-FP7-funded Marie Curie postdoctoral [PERG08-GA-2010-276867, PIOF-GA-2010-273017]
  4. Ministerio de Economia y Competitividad [CGL2009-12518/BTE, CGL2010-14848/BTE, CGL2012-32067]
  5. Junta de Andalucia [RNM-145, RNM-131]
  6. NERC [NE/J017981/1] Funding Source: UKRI
  7. Natural Environment Research Council [NE/J017981/1] Funding Source: researchfish

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Serpentinites form by hydration of mantle peridotite and constitute the largest potential reservoir of fluid-mobile elements entering subduction zones. Isotope ratios of one such element, boron, distinguish fluid contributions from crustal versus serpentinite sources. Despite 85% of boron hosted within abyssal peridotite being lost at the onset of subduction at the lizardite-to-antigorite transition, a sufficient cargo of boron to account for the composition of island arc magma is retained (c. 7 mu gg(-1), with a delta B-11 of + 22%) until the down-going slab reaches the antigorite-out isograd. At this point a B-11-rich fluid, capable of providing the distinctive d11B signature of island arc basalts, is released. Beyond the uniquely preserved antigorite-out isograd in serpentinites from Cerro del Almirez, Betic Cordillera, Spain, the prograde lithologies (antigorite-chlorite-orthopyroxene-olivine serpentinite, granofels-texture chlorite-harzburgite and spinifex-texture chlorite-harzburgite) have very different boron isotope signatures (delta B-11 - -3 to + 6%), but with no significant difference in boron concentration compared to the antigorite-serpentinite on the low P-T side of the isograd. B-11-rich fluid, which at least partly equilibrated with pelagic sediments, is implicated in the composition of these prograde lithologies, which dehydrated under open-systemconditions. Serpentinite-hosted boron lost during the early stages of dehydration is readily incorporated into forearc peridotite. This, in turn, may be dragged to sub-arc depths as a result of subduction erosion and incorporated in a melange comprising forearc serpentinite, altered oceanic crust and pelagic sediment. At the antigorite-out isograd it dehydrates, thus potentially providing an additional source of B-11-rich fluids. (C) 2014 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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