4.7 Article

Displaced helium and carbon in the Hawaiian plume

Journal

EARTH AND PLANETARY SCIENCE LETTERS
Volume 312, Issue 1-2, Pages 226-236

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.epsl.2011.09.041

Keywords

mantle plumes; Hawaii; helium; carbonatite melt; metasomatism

Ask authors/readers for more resources

High relative abundances of primordial He-3 are commonly found in ocean island basalts (OIB) thought to be derived from mantle plumes, and high He-3/He-4 ratios have been used to distinguish plume-type from non-plume OIBs. In simple plume models, one expects to find the highest He-3/He-4 ratios in the axial part of the plume conduit, which is sampled during the shield building stage of the volcanoes. However, the actual locus of the highest He-3/He-4 ratios is sometimes significantly displaced. This is best documented for the Hawaiian plume, where the highest-He-3/He-4 basalts are found on Loihi, a volcano tens of kilometers ahead of the inferred plume center, and He-3/He-4 ratios decrease systematically toward MORB-type values during the main and late phases of eruption. We propose that this effect is caused by small amounts of carbonatite melt formed in plumes as they rise through the transition zone. If the plume conduit is tilted by plate-driven upper mantle flow, the carbonatite melt infiltrates more vertically due to its low density and viscosity and is thus displaced from the plume center. Helium, if partitioned into the carbonatite melt, will also be displaced from the plume center. To test this model we use a numerical simulation of the Hawaiian plume interacting with the fast-moving Pacific lithosphere. We obtain vertical separation velocities of the carbonatite melt on the order of a meter/year. Consequently, helium and carbon, initially located in the plume center at > 450 km depth, are laterally displaced by 50 to 80 km in the shallow mantle, depending on grain size, porosity and melt production rate. This can explain why the highest He-3/(HE)-H-4 ratios (R/Ra up to 39; R/Ra equivalent to(He-3/He-4)(sample)/(He-3/He-4)(atmosphere))occur on pre-shield Loihi, why they decline during the shield phases of Mauna Loa, Mauna Kea and Haleakala, and why post-shield and rejuvenated Hawaiian volcanism delivers only low He-3-He-4 ratios (R/Ra=8-10). Our results quantify the potential role of carbonatite liquids in transporting helium in the Hawaiian conduit, and they appear to apply also to other plumes tilted by upper-mantle 'wind'. (C) 2011 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