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  • 1
    ISSN: 1476-4687
    Source: Nature Archives 1869 - 2009
    Topics: Biology , Chemistry and Pharmacology , Medicine , Natural Sciences in General , Physics
    Notes: [Auszug] Evidence for the deep recycling of surficial materials through the Earth’s mantle and their antiquity has long been sought to understand the role of subducting plates and plumes in mantle convection. Radiogenic isotope evidence for such recycling remains equivocal because the age and ...
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2024-01-09
    Keywords: 206-1256C; 206-1256D; 67-495; 67-499; Area/locality; Deep Sea Drilling Project; DRILL; Drilling/drill rig; DSDP; Event label; Glomar Challenger; Hafnium-176/Hafnium-177; Hafnium-176/Hafnium-177, error; Joides Resolution; LATITUDE; Lead-206/Lead-204 ratio; Lead-206/Lead-204 ratio, error; Lead-207/Lead-204 ratio; Lead-207/Lead-204 ratio, error; Lead-208/Lead-204 ratio; Lead-208/Lead-204 ratio, error; Leg206; Leg67; LONGITUDE; Neodymium-143/Neodymium-144 ratio; Neodymium-143/Neodymium-144 ratio, error; North Pacific/TRENCH; North Pacific Ocean; Ocean Drilling Program; ODP; POINT DISTANCE from start; Rock type; Sample type; Strontium-87/Strontium-86 ratio; Strontium-87/Strontium-86 ratio, error; δ18O; δ18O, standard deviation; ε-Hafnium; ε-Neodymium
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 1436 data points
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 2024-01-09
    Keywords: 206-1256C; 206-1256D; 67-495; 67-499; Aluminium oxide; Antimony; Area/locality; Barium; Barium/Lanthanum ratio; Barium/Thorium ratio; Caesium; Calcium oxide; Carbon dioxide; Cerium; Chromium; Cobalt; Copper; Deep Sea Drilling Project; DRILL; Drilling/drill rig; DSDP; Dysprosium; Elements, total; Erbium; Europium; Event label; Gadolinium; Gallium; Glomar Challenger; Hafnium; Holmium; ICP-MS, VG-Plasma-Quad 1; Infrared Photometer Rosemount CSA 5003; Iron oxide, Fe2O3; Joides Resolution; Lanthanum; Lanthanum/Ytterbium ratio; LATITUDE; Lead; Leg206; Leg67; LONGITUDE; Lutetium; Magnesium oxide; Manganese oxide; Molybdenum; Neodymium; Nickel; Niobium; North Pacific/TRENCH; North Pacific Ocean; Ocean Drilling Program; ODP; Phosphorus pentoxide; POINT DISTANCE from start; Potassium oxide; Praseodymium; Rock type; Rubidium; Samarium; Sample code/label; Sample type; Silicon dioxide; Sodium oxide; Strontium; Strontium/Cerium ratio; Tantalum; Terbium; Thallium; Thorium; Thulium; Tin; Titanium dioxide; Tungsten; Uranium; Uranium/Thorium ratio; Vanadium; Water in rock; X-ray fluorescence spectrometer (Philips PW1480); Ytterbium; Yttrium; Zinc; Zirconium; Zirconium/Hafnium ratio
    Type: Dataset
    Format: text/tab-separated-values, 5386 data points
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  • 4
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    Unknown
    PANGAEA
    In:  Supplement to: Heydolph, Ken; Hoernle, Kaj; Hauff, Folkmar; van den Bogaard, Paul; Portnyagin, Maxim V; Bindeman, Ilya; Garbe-Schönberg, Dieter (2012): Along and across arc geochemical variations in NW Central America: Evidence for involvement of lithospheric pyroxenite. Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta, 84, 459-491, https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gca.2012.01.035
    Publication Date: 2024-01-09
    Description: The Central American Volcanic Arc (CAVA) has been the subject of intensive research over the past few years, leading to a variety of distinct models for the origin of CAVA lavas with various source components. We present a new model for the NW Central American Volcanic Arc based on a comprehensive new geochemical data set (major and trace element and Sr-Nd-Pb-Hf-O isotope ratios) of mafic volcanic front (VF), behind the volcanic front (BVF) and back-arc (BA) lava and tephra samples from NW Nicaragua, Honduras, El Salvador and Guatemala. Additionally we present data on subducting Cocos Plate sediments (from DSDP Leg 67 Sites 495 and 499) and igneous oceanic crust (from DSDP Leg 67 Site 495), and Guatemalan (Chortis Block) granitic and metamorphic continental basement. We observe systematic variations in trace element and isotopic compositions both along and across the arc. The data require at least three different endmembers for the volcanism in NW Central America. (1) The NW Nicaragua VF lavas require an endmember with very high Ba/(La, Th) and U/Th, relatively radiogenic Sr, Nd and Hf but unradiogenic Pb and low d18O, reflecting a largely serpentinite-derived fluid/hydrous melt flux from the subducting slab into a depleted N-MORB type of mantle wedge. (2) The Guatemala VF and BVF mafic lavas require an enriched endmember with low Ba/(La, Th), U/Th, high d18O and radiogenic Sr and Pb but unradiogenic Nd and Hf isotope ratios. Correlations of Hf with both Nd and Pb isotopic compositions are not consistent with this endmember being subducted sediments. Granitic samples from the Chiquimula Plutonic Complex in Guatemala have the appropriate isotopic composition to serve as this endmember, but the large amounts of assimilation required to explain the isotope data are not consistent with the basaltic compositions of the volcanic rocks. In addition, mixing regressions on Nd vs. Hf and the Sr and O isotope plots do not go through the data. Therefore, we propose that this endmember could represent pyroxenites in the lithosphere (mantle and possibly lower crust), derived from parental magmas for the plutonic rocks. (3) The Honduras and Caribbean BA lavas define an isotopically depleted endmember (with unradiogenic Sr but radiogenic Nd, Hf and Pb isotope ratios), having OIB-like major and trace element compositions (e.g. low Ba/(La, Th) and U/Th, high La/Yb). This endmember is possibly derived from melting of young, recycled oceanic crust in the asthenosphere upwelling in the back-arc. Mixing between these three endmember types of magmas can explain the observed systematic geochemical variations along and across the NW Central American Arc.
    Keywords: Deep Sea Drilling Project; DSDP; Ocean Drilling Program; ODP
    Type: Dataset
    Format: application/zip, 2 datasets
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2018-09-24
    Description: Hydrosphere interactions and alteration of the terrestrial crust likely played a critical role in shaping Earth’s surface, and in promoting prebiotic reactions leading to life, before 4.03 Ga (the Hadean Eon). The identity of aqueously altered material strongly depends on lithospheric cycling of abundant and water-soluble elements such as Si and O. However, direct constraints that define the character of Hadean sedimentary material are absent because samples from this earliest eon are limited to detrital zircons (ZrSiO4). Here we show that concurrent measurements of Si and O isotope ratios in Phanerozoic and detrital pre-3.0 Ga zircon constrain the composition of aqueously altered precursors incorporated into their source melts. Phanerozoic zircon from (S)edimentary-type rocks contain heterogeneous δ18O and δ30Si values consistent with assimilation of metapelitic material, distinct from the isotopic character of zircon from (I)gneous- and (A)norogenic-type rocks. The δ18O values of detrital Archean zircons are heterogeneous, although yield Si isotope compositions like mantle-derived zircon. Hadean crystals yield elevated δ18O values (vs. mantle zircon) and δ30Si values span almost the entire range observed for Phanerozoic samples. Coupled Si and O isotope data represent a constraint on Hadean weathering and sedimentary input into felsic melts including remelting of amphibolites possibly of basaltic origin, and fractional addition of chemical sediments, such as cherts and/or banded iron formations (BIFs) into source melts. That such sedimentary deposits were extensive enough to change the chemical signature of intracrustal melts suggests they may have been a suitable niche for (pre)biotic chemistry as early as 4.1 Ga.
    Print ISSN: 0027-8424
    Electronic ISSN: 1091-6490
    Topics: Biology , Medicine , Natural Sciences in General
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2006-06-01
    Print ISSN: 0036-8733
    Electronic ISSN: 1946-7087
    Topics: Biology , Natural Sciences in General , Physics
    Published by Springer Nature
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  • 7
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    Unknown
    Geological Society of America (GSA)
    Publication Date: 2011-08-01
    Description: Rocks with {delta}18O values of less than 5{per thousand} SMOW (Standard Mean Ocean Water) contain oxygen derived from ~0{per thousand} seawater or meteoric (rain or melted snow,
    Print ISSN: 0091-7613
    Electronic ISSN: 1943-2682
    Topics: Geosciences
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2012-04-01
    Description: The Fine Gold Intrusive Suite is one of the largest (〉2000 km2) and oldest intrusive complexes in the Sierra Nevada batholith (California, USA), and therefore contains a wealth of information about nascent magmatic processes in a convergent margin arc. Because the suite intrudes both accreted oceanic and/or island-arc terranes and continental crust, it provides perspective on how convergent margin magmatism recycles existing crust versus reworking of fringing island arcs into continental crust. Such insight informs our understanding of how continental crust formation may have operated in the Phanerozoic as compared to earlier in Earth history.New zircon U-Pb geochronology shows that the largely tonalitic suite was emplaced over ~19 m.y. (124–105 Ma), in three pulses that young from west to east. The most recent domain is nested within the previous ones, such that lobes of magma protruding from the main bodies of the Bass Lake Tonalite (the primary member of the Fine Gold Intrusive Suite) are older than interior areas. Zircon d18O (6.1‰–8.0‰) and eHf (–4.7 + 6.4) show temporal trends indicating that early magmas were source mixtures of mantle with as much as 45% Paleozoic to Mesozoic oceanic and/or arc rocks, whereas later magmas contain greater inputs (to 50%) of Proterozoic North American crust. Older domains in the suite were likely generated from isolated sources, including initial high Sr/Y (to ~90), high Na2O magmas consistent with garnet-bearing sources inferred to be relatively deep. Higher 87Sr/86Sr, lower eHf, and higher Rb/Sr values in younger plutons show a source that tapped greater proportions of North American crust and was presumably more organized and larger, given its more homogeneous isotopic and trace element traits. Our findings also show that expression of the 87Sr/86Sr = 0.706 isopleth in arc magmas may be delayed until magma sources are sufficiently vigorous to melt and incorporate aged continental crust. Therefore, Sri values of older stitching plutons may better record the position of discrete terrane boundaries, whereas younger plutons will record the magmatically average position of terrane boundaries. Although the Fine Gold Intrusive Suite is comparable to the Late Cretaceous voluminous intrusive suite of eastern Sierran suites in terms of duration and age zoning of magmatism, the influence of preexisting basement compositions and differing degrees of organization of the magma sources with age is more pronounced. In addition, the findings show that recycling of fringing arc terranes into continental crust is relatively rapid and that estimates of the growth of Phanerozoic continental crust from such reprocessing should be revised upward.
    Electronic ISSN: 1553-040X
    Topics: Geosciences
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2018-01-01
    Print ISSN: 0003-004X
    Electronic ISSN: 1945-3027
    Topics: Geosciences
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 2017-01-23
    Description: The Yellowstone volcanic field is one of the largest and best-studied centres of rhyolitic volcanism on Earth, yet it still contains little-studied periods of activity. Such an example is the Island Park–Mount Jackson series, which erupted between the Mesa Falls and Lava Creek caldera-forming events as a series of rhyolitic domes and lavas. Here we present the first detailed characterisation of these lavas and use our findings to provide a framework for rhyolite generation in Yellowstone between 1·3 and 0·6 Ma, as well as to assess whether magmatic evolution hints at a forthcoming super-eruption. These porphyritic (15–40% crystals) lavas contain mostly sanidine and quartz with lesser amounts of plagioclase (consistent with equilibrium magmatic modelling via rhyolite-MELTS) and a complex assemblage of mafic minerals. Mineral compositions vary significantly between crystals in each unit, with larger ranges than expected from a single homogeneous population in equilibrium with its host melt. Oxygen isotopes in quartz and sanidine indicate slight depletions (δ18Omagma of 5·0–6·1‰), suggesting some contribution by localised remelting of hydrothermally altered material in the area of the previous Mesa Falls Tuff-related caldera collapse. The preservation of variable O isotopic compositions in quartz requires crystal entrainment less than a few thousand years prior to eruption. Late entrainment of rhyolitic material is supported by the occurrence of subtly older sanidines dated by single-grain 40Ar/39Ar geochronology. The eruption ages of the lavas show discrete clusters illustrating that extended quiescence (〉100 kyr) in magmatic activity may be a recurring feature in Yellowstone volcanism. Ubiquitous crystal aggregates, dominated by plagioclase, pyroxene and Fe–Ti oxides, are interpreted as cumulates co-erupted with their extracted liquid. Identical crystal aggregates are found in both normal-δ18O and low-δ18O rocks from Yellowstone, indicating that common petrogenetic processes characterise both volcanic suites, including the late-stage extraction of melt from an incrementally built upper crustal mush zone.
    Print ISSN: 0022-3530
    Electronic ISSN: 1460-2415
    Topics: Geosciences
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