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  • 1
    Monograph available for loan
    Monograph available for loan
    Chantilly, Va. : Mineralogical Society of America
    Associated volumes
    Call number: 11/M 06.0515
    In: Reviews in mineralogy & geochemistry
    Description / Table of Contents: Earth is a water planet. Oceans of liquid water dominate the surface processes of the planet. On the surface, water controls weathering as well as transport and deposition of sediments. Liquid water is necessary for life. In the interior, water fluxes melting and controls the solid-state viscosity of the convecting mantle and so controls volcanism and tectonics. Oceans cover more than 70% of the surface but make up only about 0.025% of the planet's mass. Hydrogen is the most abundant element in the cosmos, but in the bulk Earth, it is one of the most poorly constrained chemical compositional variables. Almost all of the nominally anhydrous minerals that compose the Earth's crust and mantle can incorporate measurable amounts of hydrogen. Because these are minerals that contain oxygen as the principal anion, the major incorporation mechanism is as hydroxyl, OH-, and the chemical component is equivalent to water, H2O. Although the hydrogen proton can be considered a monovalent cation, it does not occupy same structural position as a typical cation in a mineral structure, but rather forms a hydrogen bond with the oxygens on the edge of the coordination polyhedron. The amount incorporated is thus quite sensitive to pressure and the amount of H that can be incorporated in these phases generally increases with pressure and sometimes with temperature. Hydrogen solubility in nominally anhydrous minerals is thus much more sensitive to temperature and pressure than that of other elements. Because the mass of rock in the mantle is so large relative to ocean mass, the amount that is incorporated the nominally anhydrous phases of the interior may constitute the largest reservoir of water in the planet. Understanding the behavior and chemistry of hydrogen in minerals at the atomic scale is thus central to understanding the geology of the planet. There have been significant recent advances in the detection, measurement, and location of H in the nominally anhydrous silicate and oxide minerals that compose the planet. There have also been advances in experimental methods for measurement of H diffusion and the effects of H on the phase boundaries and physical properties whereby the presence of H in the interior may be inferred from seismic or other geophysical studies. It is the objective of this volume to consolidate these advances with reviews of recent research in the geochemistry and mineral physics of hydrogen in the principal mineral phases of the Earth's crust and mantle. The Chapters We begin with a review of analytical methods for measuring and calibrating water contents in nominally anhydrous minerals by George Rossman. While infrared spectroscopy is still the most sensitive and most convenient method for detecting water in minerals, it is not intrinsically quantitative but requires calibration by some other, independent analytical method, such as nuclear reaction analysis, hydrogen manometry, or SIMS. A particular advantage of infrared spectroscopy, however, is the fact that it does not only probe the concentration, but also the structure of hydrous species in a mineral and in many cases the precise location of a proton in a mineral structure can be worked out based on infrared spectra alone. The methods and principles behind this are reviewed by Eugen Libowitzky and Anton Beran, with many illustrative examples. Compared to infrared spectroscopy, NMR is much less used in studying hydrogen in minerals, mostly due to its lower sensitivity, the requirement of samples free of paramagnetic ions such as Fe2+ and because of the more complicated instrumentation required for NMR measurements. However, NMR could be very useful under some circumstances. It could detect any hydrogen species in a sample, including such species as H2 that would be invisible with infrared. Potential applications of NMR to the study of hydrogen in minerals are reviewed by Simon Kohn. While structural models of "water" in minerals have already been deduced from infrared spectra several decades ago, in recent years atomistic modeling has become a powerful tool for predicting potential sites for hydrogen in minerals. The review by Kate Wright gives an overview over both quantum mechanical methods and classical methods based on interatomic potentials. Joseph Smyth then summarizes the crystal chemistry of hydrogen in high-pressure silicate and oxide minerals. As a general rule, the incorporation of hydrogen is not controlled by the size of potential sites in the crystal lattice; rather, the protons will preferentially attach to oxygen atoms that are electrostatically underbonded, such as the non-silicate oxygen atoms in some high-pressure phases. Moreover, heterovalent substitutions, e.g., the substitution of Al3+ for Si4+, can have a major effect on the incorporation of hydrogen. Data on water in natural minerals from crust and mantle are compiled and discussed in three reviews by Elisabeth Johnson, Henrik Skogby and by Anton Beran and Eugen Libowitzky. Among the major mantle minerals, clinopyroxenes usually retain the highest water contents, followed by orthopyroxenes and olivine, while the water contents in garnets are generally low. Most of these water contents need to be considered as minimum values, as many of the mantle xenoliths may have lost water during ascent. However, there are some cases where the correlation between the water contents and other geochemical parameters suggest that the measured water concentrations reflect the true original water content in the mantle. The basic thermodynamics as well as experimental data on water solubility and partitioning are reviewed by Hans Keppler and Nathalie Bolfan Casanova. Water solubility in minerals depends in a complicated way on pressure, temperature, water fugacity and bulk composition. For example, water solubility in the same mineral can increase or decrease with temperature, depending on the pressure of the experiments. Nevertheless, the pressure and temperature dependence of water solubility can be described by a rather simple thermodynamic formalism and for most minerals of the upper mantle, the relevant thermodynamic parameters are known. The highest water solubilities are reached in the minerals wadsleyite and ringwoodite stable in the transition zone, while the minerals of the lower mantle are probably mostly dry. The rather limited experimental data on water partitioning between silicate melts and minerals are reviewed by Simon Kohn and Kevin Grant. One important observation here is that comparing the compatibility of hydrogen with that of some rare earth element is misleading, as such correlations are always limited to a small range of pressure and temperature for a given mineral. The stabilities of hydrous phases in the peridotite mantle and in subducted slabs are reviewed by Daniel Frost and by Tatsuhiko Kawamoto. While most of the water in the mantle is certainly stored in the nominally anhydrous minerals, hydrous phases can be important storage sites of water in certain environments. Amphibole and phlogopite require a significant metasomatic enrichment of Na and K in order to be stabilized in the upper mantle, but serpentine may be an important carrier of water in cold subducted slabs. The diffusion of hydrogen in minerals is reviewed by Jannick Ingrin and Marc Blanchard. An important general observation here is that natural minerals usually do not loose hydrogen as water, but as H2 generated by redox reaction of OH with Fe2+. Moreover, diffusion coefficients of different mantle minerals can vary by orders of magnitude, often with significant anisotropy. While some minerals in a mantle xenolith may therefore have lost virtually all of their water during ascent, other minerals may still preserve the original water content and in general, the apparent partition coefficients of water between the minerals of the same xenolith can be totally out of equilibrium. Accordingly, it would be highly desirable to directly deduce the water content in the mantle from geophysical data. One strategy, based on seismic velocities and therefore ultimately on the effect of water on the equation of state of minerals, is outlined by Steve Jacobsen. The dissolution of water in minerals usually increases the number of cation vacancies, yielding reduced bulk and shear moduli and seismic velocities. Particularly, the effect on shear velocities is strong and probably larger than the effect expected from local temperature variations. Accordingly, the vs/vp ratio could be a sensitive indicator of mantle hydration. A more general approach towards remote sensing of hydrogen in the Earth's mantle, including effects of seismic anisotropy due to lattice preferred orientation and the use of electrical conductivity data is presented by Shun-ichiro Karato. Probably the most important effect of water on geodynamics is related to the fact that even traces of water dramatically reduce the mechanical strength of rocks during deformation. The physics behind this effect is discussed by David Kohlstedt. Interestingly, it appears that the main mechanism behind "hydrolytic weakening" is related to the effect of water on the concentration and mobility of Si vacancies, rather than to the protons themselves. Water may have major effects on the location of mantle discontinuities, as reviewed by Eiji Ohtani and Konstantin Litasov. Most of these effects can be rationalized as being due to the expansion of the stability fields of those phases (e.g., wadsleyite) that preferentially incorporate water. Together with other geophysical data, the changes in the depths of discontinuities are a promising tool for the remote sensing of water contents in the mantle. The global effects of water on the evolution of our planet are reviewed in the last two chapters by Bernard Marty, Reika Yokochi and Klaus Regenauer-Lieb. By combining hydrogen und nitrogen isotope data, Marty and Yokochi demonstrate convincingly that most of the Earth's water very likely originated from a chondritic source. Water may have had a profound effect on the early evolution of our planet, since a water-rich dense atmosphere could have favored melting by a thermal blanketing effect. However, Marty and Yokochi also show very clearly that it is pretty much impossible to derive reliable estimates of the Earth's present-day water content from cosmochemical arguments, since many factors affecting the loss of water during and after accretion are poorly constrained or not constrained at all. In the last chapter, Klaus Regenauer-Lieb investigates the effect of water on the style of global tectonics. He demonstrates that plate tectonics as we know it is only possible if the water content of the mantle is above a threshold value. The different tectonic style observed on Mars and Venus may therefore be directly related to differences in mantle water content. Earth is the water planet — not just because of it's oceans, but also because of its tectonic evolution.
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: xix, 478 S.
    ISBN: 0-939950-74-X , 978-0-939950-74-4
    ISSN: 1529-6466
    Series Statement: Reviews in mineralogy & geochemistry 62
    Classification:
    Hydrology
    Note: Chapter 1. Analytical Methods for Measuring Water in Nominally Anhydrous Minerals by George R. Rossman, p. 1 - 28 Chapter 2. The Structure of Hydrous Species in Nominally Anhydrous Minerals: Information from Polarized IR Spectroscopy by Eugen Libowitzky and Anton Beran, p. 29 - 52 Chapter 3. Structural Studies of OH in Nominally Anhydrous Minerals Using NMR by Simon C. Kohn, p. 53 - 66 Chapter 4. Atomistic Models of OH Defects in Nominally Anhydrous Minerals by Kate Wright, p. 67 - 84 Chapter 5. Hydrogen in High Pressure Silicate and Oxide Mineral Structures by Joseph R. Smyth, p. 85 - 116 Chapter 6. Water in Nominally Anhydrous Crustal Minerals: Speciation, Concentration, and Geologic Significance by Elizabeth A. Johnson, p. 117 - 154 Chapter 7. Water in Natural Mantle Minerals I: Pyroxenes by Henrik Skogby, p. 155 - 168 Chapter 8. Water in Natural Mantle Minerals II: Olivine, Garnet and Accessory Minerals by Anton Beran and Eugen Libowitzky, p. 169 - 192 Chapter 9. Thermodynamics of Water Solubility and Partitioning by Hans Keppler and Nathalie Bolfan-Casanova, p. 193 - 230 Chapter 10. The Partitioning of Water Between Nominally Anhydrous Minerals and Silicate Melts by Simon C. Kohn and Kevin J. Grant, p. 231 - 242 Chapter 11. The Stability of Hydrous Mantle Phases by Daniel J. Frost, p. 243 - 272 Chapter 12. Hydrous Phases and Water Transport in the Subducting Slab by Tatsuhiko Kawamoto, p. 273 - 290 Chapter 13. Diffusion of Hydrogen in Minerals by Jannick Ingrin and Marc Blanchard, p. 291 - 320 Chapter 14. Effect of Water on the Equation of State of Nominally Anhydrous Minerals by Steven D. Jacobsen, p. 321 - 342 Chapter 15. Remote Sensing of Hydrogen in Earth's Mantle by Shun-ichiro Karato, p. 343 - 376 Chapter 16. The Role of Water in High-Temperature Rock Deformation by David L. Kohlstedt, p. 377 - 396 Chapter 17. The Effect of Water on Mantle Phase Transitions by Eiji Ohtani and K. D. Litasov, p. 397 - 420 Chapter 18. Water in the Early Earth by Bernard Marty and Reika Yokochi, p. 421 - 450 Chapter 19. Water and Geodynamics by Klaus Regenauer-Lieb, p. 451 - 474
    Location: Reading room
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  • 2
    Monograph available for loan
    Monograph available for loan
    Schäffer-Poeschel : Stuttgart
    Call number: PIK B 160-93-0087
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: 442 S.
    ISBN: 3791006711
    Location: A 18 - must be ordered
    Branch Library: PIK Library
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  • 3
    Call number: K 93.00 7
    Pages: 180x90 cm, gefaltet 23 cm
    Branch Library: GFZ Library
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  • 4
    Monograph available for loan
    Monograph available for loan
    Bayreuth : Bayerisches Geoinstitut
    Call number: M 21.94574
    Type of Medium: Monograph available for loan
    Pages: 80 Seiten , Illustrationen, Diagramme
    Language: English
    Location: Upper compact magazine
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  • 5
    Unknown
    Chantilly, Va. : Mineralogical Society of America
    Description / Table of Contents: Earth is a water planet. Oceans of liquid water dominate the surface processes of the planet. On the surface, water controls weathering as well as transport and deposition of sediments. Liquid water is necessary for life. In the interior, water fluxes melting and controls the solid-state viscosity of the convecting mantle and so controls volcanism and tectonics. Oceans cover more than 70% of the surface but make up only about 0.025% of the planet's mass. Hydrogen is the most abundant element in the cosmos, but in the bulk Earth, it is one of the most poorly constrained chemical compositional variables. Almost all of the nominally anhydrous minerals that compose the Earth's crust and mantle can incorporate measurable amounts of hydrogen. Because these are minerals that contain oxygen as the principal anion, the major incorporation mechanism is as hydroxyl, OH-, and the chemical component is equivalent to water, H2O. Although the hydrogen proton can be considered a monovalent cation, it does not occupy same structural position as a typical cation in a mineral structure, but rather forms a hydrogen bond with the oxygens on the edge of the coordination polyhedron. The amount incorporated is thus quite sensitive to pressure and the amount of H that can be incorporated in these phases generally increases with pressure and sometimes with temperature. Hydrogen solubility in nominally anhydrous minerals is thus much more sensitive to temperature and pressure than that of other elements. Because the mass of rock in the mantle is so large relative to ocean mass, the amount that is incorporated the nominally anhydrous phases of the interior may constitute the largest reservoir of water in the planet. Understanding the behavior and chemistry of hydrogen in minerals at the atomic scale is thus central to understanding the geology of the planet. There have been significant recent advances in the detection, measurement, and location of H in the nominally anhydrous silicate and oxide minerals that compose the planet. There have also been advances in experimental methods for measurement of H diffusion and the effects of H on the phase boundaries and physical properties whereby the presence of H in the interior may be inferred from seismic or other geophysical studies. It is the objective of this volume to consolidate these advances with reviews of recent research in the geochemistry and mineral physics of hydrogen in the principal mineral phases of the Earth's crust and mantle.
    Pages: Online-Ressource (VIII, 478 Seiten)
    ISBN: 093995074X
    Language: English
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2023-09-12
    Description: 〈title xmlns:mml="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML"〉Abstract〈/title〉〈p xmlns:mml="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML" xml:lang="en"〉Chloromethane (CH〈sub〉3〈/sub〉Cl) is the most abundant natural chlorinated organic compound in the atmosphere playing an important role in catalyzing stratospheric ozone loss. Vegetation emits the largest amounts of CH〈sub〉3〈/sub〉Cl to the atmosphere but its source strength is highly uncertain leading also to large uncertainties in the global budget of CH〈sub〉3〈/sub〉Cl. Triple‐element stable isotope analysis may help to reduce uncertainties because it provides additional process‐level information compared to conventional quantification methods. In this study we performed experiments to obtain a first triple‐elemental isotopic fingerprint (〈sup〉2〈/sup〉H, 〈sup〉13〈/sup〉C, 〈sup〉37〈/sup〉Cl) of CH〈sub〉3〈/sub〉Cl emitted by a relevant plant species (royal fern, 〈italic〉Osmunda regalis〈/italic〉). Isotopic values of all three elements showed considerable differences compared to isotopic values of industrially manufactured CH〈sub〉3〈/sub〉Cl which bodes well for future applications to distinguish individual sources. Isotopic analysis of potential precursors (rain, methoxy groups) of CH〈sub〉3〈/sub〉Cl in plants revealed no measurable change of hydrogen and chlorine isotopic ratios during formation which may provide a simpler route to estimate the isotopic composition of CH〈sub〉3〈/sub〉Cl emissions. Plant degradation experiments of CH〈sub〉3〈/sub〉Cl were carried out with club moss (〈italic〉Selaginella kraussiana〈/italic〉) revealing significant isotopic fractionation for all three elements. The fractionation pattern characterized by epsilon and lambda is inconsistent with known biotic dechlorination reactions indicating a yet unreported biotic degradation mechanism for CH〈sub〉3〈/sub〉Cl. Overall, this study provides first insights into the triple‐elemental isotopic fingerprint of plant emissions and degradation. The results may represent important input data for future isotope‐based models to improve global budget estimates of CH〈sub〉3〈/sub〉Cl and to explore the yet unknown degradation pathways.〈/p〉
    Description: Plain Language Summary: Chloromethane is the most abundant chlorinated organic compound in the atmosphere. It contributes to the destruction of the ozone layer that protects us from skin cancer and genetic damage. Currently, we do not have a good understanding of the sources and removal processes of chloromethane in the atmosphere. In this paper, we use a technique that takes advantage of the different varieties of a chemical element. These so‐called isotopes behave differently during chemical reactions that lead to individual isotopic fingerprints depending on the source or removal process. We used isotopic fingerprints of all three chemical elements in chloromethane and showed that chloromethane produced by a plant (royal fern) differs substantially from chloromethane manufactured by industry. Other plant species such as club moss are able to remove chloromethane from the atmosphere but it is often not clear how this occurs. Isotopic analysis revealed that the studied club moss uses a unique, thus far unknown, way to break down chloromethane. This study demonstrates how information extracted from isotopic fingerprints will help to improve our understanding of sources and removal processes of chloromethane in the atmosphere. It can help to better predict how ozone destruction in the stratosphere affects us in the future.〈/p〉
    Description: Key Points: First triple‐element isotopic characterization of plant CH〈sub〉3〈/sub〉Cl emission and degradation. Plant degradation experiments suggest another yet unknown transformation pathway. Important input data for future isotope based models to improve understanding of global CH〈sub〉3〈/sub〉Cl budget.
    Description: Helmholtz Association http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100009318
    Description: Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100001659
    Description: https://doi.org/10.48758/ufz.13388
    Keywords: ddc:551.9 ; CH3Cl ; ozone depletion ; isotopes ; plant emissions ; halogens
    Language: English
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2023-08-08
    Description: The partitioning of a large suite of trace elements between biotite and water-saturated granitic melt was measured at 2 kbar and 700—800 ˚C. To reach equilibrium and to grow biotite crystals large enough for analysis, runs usually lasted from 30 to 45 days. In every charge, a few trace elements were initially doped at the 0.1—0.5 wt. % level and analyzed by electron microprobe after the run. First-row transition metal ions are highly compatible in biotite with D〈sup〉biotite/melt〈/sup〉 of 17 for Ti, 35 for V, 47 for Co, 174 for Ni, and 5.8 for Zn. A very notable exception is Cu with D〈sup〉biotite/melt〈/sup〉 〈 0.9. This is likely one of the reasons why Cu is enriched together with Mo (D〈sup〉biotite/melt〈/sup〉 = 0.29) in porphyry deposits associated with intermediate to felsic plutons, while the other transition metals are not. Both Nb and Ta are mildly compatible in biotite with D〈sup〉biotite/melt〈/sup〉 being larger for Nb (3.69) than for Ta (1.89). Moderate (15—30%) biotite fractionation would be sufficient to reduce the Nb/Ta ratio from the chondritic value to the range observed in the continental crust. Moreover, the strong partitioning of Ti into biotite implies that already modest biotite fractionation suppresses the saturation of Ti-oxide phases and thereby indirectly facilitates the enrichment of Ta over Nb in the residual melt. The heavy alkalis, alkaline earths, and Pb are only mildly fractionated between biotite and melt (D〈sup〉biotite/melt〈/sup〉 = 3.8 for Rb, 0.6 for Cs, 0.6 for Sr, 1.8 for Ba, 0.7 for Pb). The rare earth elements are generally incompatible in biotite, with a minimum for Dbiotite/melt of 0.03–0.06 at Gd, Tb, and Dy, while both the light and heavy rare earths are less incompatible (e.g. D〈sup〉biotite/melt〈/sup〉 = 0.6 for La and 0.3 for Yb). This behavior probably reflects a partitioning into two sites, the K site for the light rare earths and the octahedral Mg site for the heavy rare earths. There is no obvious dependence of the rare earth partition coefficients on tetrahedral Al in the biotite, presumably because charge balancing by cation vacancies is possible. Allanite was found as run product in some experiments. For the light rare earths, D〈sup〉allanite/melt〈/sup〉 is very high (e.g. 385 to 963 for Ce and Nd) and appears to increase with decreasing temperatures. However, the rather high solubility of allanite in the melts implies that it likely only crystallizes during the last stages of cooling of most magmas, except if the source magma is unusually enriched in rare earths.
    Description: Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft
    Description: Universität Bayreuth (3145)
    Keywords: ddc:550.78 ; Biotite ; Allanite ; Granite ; Partitioning ; Solubility ; Rare earths ; Niobium ; Tantalum ; Nb/Ta ratio ; Porphyry copper deposits
    Language: English
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 2023-06-23
    Description: Subsurface magmatic–hydrothermal systems are often associated with elevated electrical conductivities in the Earthʼs crust. To facilitate the interpretation of these data and to allow distinguishing between the effects of silicate melts and fluids, the electrical conductivity of aqueous fluids in the system H 2 O–HCl was measured in an externally heated diamond anvil cell. Data were collected to 700 °C and 1 GPa, for HCl concentrations equivalent to 0.01, 0.1, and 1 mol/l at ambient conditions. The data, therefore, more than double the pressure range of previous measurements and extend them to geologically realistic HCl concentrations. The conductivities 𝜎 (in S/m) are well reproduced by a numerical model log 𝜎 = −2.032 + 205.8 T−1 + 0.895 log c + 3.888 log 𝜌 + logΛ0(T,𝜌), where T is the temperature in K, c is the HCl concentration in wt. %, and 𝜌 is the density of pure water at the corresponding pressure and temperature conditions. Λ0(T,𝜌) is the limiting molar conductivity (in S cm2 mol −1 ) at infinite dilution, Λ0(T,𝜌) = 2550.14 − 505.10𝜌 − 429,437 T−1 . A regression fit of more than 800 data points to this model yielded R2 = 0.95. Conductivities increase with pressure and fluid densities due to an enhanced dissociation of HCl. However, at constant pressures, conductivities decrease with temperature because of reduced dissociation. This effect is particularly strong at shallow crustal pressures of 100–200 MPa and can reduce conductivities by two orders of magnitude. We, therefore, suggest that the low conductivities sometimes observed at shallow depths below the volcanic centers in magmatic–hydrothermal systems may simply reflect elevated temperatures. The strong negative temperature effect on fluid conductivities may offer a possibility for the remote sensing of temperature variations in such systems and may allow distinguishing the effects of magma intrusions from changes in hydrothermal circulation. The generally very high conductivities of HCl–NaCl–H 2 O fluids at deep crustal pressures (500 MPa–1 GPa) imply that electrical conductors in the deep crust, as in the Altiplano magmatic province and elsewhere, may at least partially be due to hydrothermal activity.
    Description: Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100001659
    Description: Universität Bayreuth (3145)
    Keywords: ddc:550.724 ; Electrical conductivity ; Fluid ; HCl ; Hydrothermal systems ; Magnetotelluric data
    Language: English
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 2023-07-21
    Description: The partitioning of major and trace elements between eclogite and aqueous fluids with variable salinity was studied at 700–800 °C and 4–6 GPa in piston cylinder and multi anvil experiments. Fluid compositions were determined using the diamond trap technique combined with laser ablation ICP-MS measurements in the frozen state. In addition to NaCl, SiO2 is the main solute in the fluids. The fluid/eclogite partition coefficients of the large ion lithophile elements (LILE), such as Rb, Cs, Sr, and Ba as well as those of the light rare earths (LREE), of Pb, and of U increase by up to three orders of magnitude with salinity. These elements will therefore be efficiently transported by saline fluids. On the other hand, typical high field strength elements, such as Ti, Nb, and Ta, are not mobilized even at high salinities. Increasing temperature and pressure gradually increases the partitioning into the fluid. In particular, Th is mobilized by silica-rich fluids at 6 GPa already at low salinities. We show that we can fully reproduce the trace element enrichment pattern of primitive arc basalts by adding a few percent of saline fluid (with 5–10 wt% Cl) released from the basaltic slab to the zone of melting in the mantle wedge. Assuming 2 wt% of rutile in the eclogite equilibrated with the saline fluid produces a negative Nb Ta anomaly that is larger than in most primitive arc basalts. Therefore, we conclude that the rutile fraction in the subducted eclogite below most arcs is likely 〈 1 wt%. In fact, saline fluids would even produce a noticeable negative Nb Ta anomaly without any rutile in the eclogite residue. Metasomatism by sediment melts alone, on the other hand, is unable to produce the enrichment pattern seen in arc basalts. We, therefore, conclude that at least for primitive arc basalts, the release of hydrous fluids from the basaltic part of the subducted slab is the trigger for melting and the main agent of trace element enrichment. The contribution of sediment melts to the petrogenesis of these magmas is likely negligible. In the supplementary material, we provide a “Subduction Calculator” in Excel format, which allows the calculation of the trace element abundance pattern in primitive arc basalts as function of fluid salinity, the amount of fluid released from the basaltic part of the subducted slab, the fluid fraction added to the source, and the degree of melting.
    Description: DFG
    Description: Universität Bayreuth (3145)
    Keywords: ddc:551.9 ; Subduction zone fluids ; Fluid/eclogite partitioning ; Arc magmas ; Salinity ; Trace elements ; Nb Ta anomaly ; Primitive arc basalts
    Language: English
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 2023-07-26
    Description: 〈title xmlns:mml="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML"〉Abstract〈/title〉〈p xmlns:mml="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML" xml:lang="en"〉Aquatic ecosystems play an important role in global methane cycling and many field studies have reported methane supersaturation in the oxic surface mixed layer (SML) of the ocean and in the epilimnion of lakes. The origin of methane formed under oxic condition is hotly debated and several pathways have recently been offered to explain the “methane paradox.” In this context, stable isotope measurements have been applied to constrain methane sources in supersaturated oxygenated waters. Here we present stable carbon isotope signatures for six widespread marine phytoplankton species, three haptophyte algae and three cyanobacteria, incubated under laboratory conditions. The observed isotopic patterns implicate that methane formed by phytoplankton might be clearly distinguished from methane produced by methanogenic archaea. Comparing results from phytoplankton experiments with isotopic data from field measurements, suggests that algal and cyanobacterial populations may contribute substantially to methane formation observed in the SML of oceans and lakes.〈/p〉
    Description: Plain Language Summary: Methane plays an important role in atmospheric chemistry and physics as it contributes to global warming and to the destruction of ozone in the stratosphere. Knowing the sources and sinks of methane in the environment is a prerequisite for understanding the global atmospheric methane cycle but also to better predict future climate change. Measurements of the stable carbon isotope composition of carbon—the ratio between the heavy and light stable isotope of carbon—help to identify methane sources in the environment and to distinguish them from other formation processes. We identified the carbon isotope fingerprint of methane released from phytoplankton including algal and cyanobacterial species. The observed isotope signature improves our understanding of methane cycling in the surface layers of aquatic environments helping us to better estimate methane emissions to the atmosphere.〈/p〉
    Description: Key Points: Stable carbon isotope values of methane emitted from six phytoplankton cultures incubated in the laboratory. Isotope fractionation between methane source signature and biomass of widespread algal and cyanobacterial species. Isotopic patterns of methane released by phytoplankton may be clearly distinguished from methane formed by methanogenic archaea.
    Description: Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/501100001659
    Description: Spanish Ministry of Universities
    Description: https://doi.org/10.11588/data/YYLEKU
    Keywords: ddc:551.9 ; methane ; stable isotopes ; phytoplankton ; algae ; cyanobacteria ; methane paradox
    Language: English
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