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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2020-02-06
    Description: Volcanic sequences on ocean islands record the temporal evolution of underlying magmatic systems and provide insights into how silicic crust is produced away from convergent margins. Assimilation has often been suspected to contribute, but the detection of such a process and its evolving maturity during migration across a mantle plume is less well documented. Here we present new major and trace element and Sr-Nd-Pb-U-Th-Ra-Pa isotope data that facilitate comparison of basanite to phonolite evolution on Tenerife (Canary Islands) with that shown by published data from La Palma. On both islands, (230Th/238U) ratios decrease with differentiation from parental magmas with 230Th excess toward different, silicic contaminants in secular equilibrium. On La Palma, this is inferred to reflect assimilation of small amounts of mafic wall rock. On Tenerife, both (230Th/238U) and (231Pa/235U) ratios decrease toward 1 with increasing differentiation, and this is accompanied by a subtle increase in Pb isotope ratios. At the same time, (226Ra/230Th) ratios change from 〈1 to 〉1 (a hitherto unreported magnitude). The Tenerife assimilant is thus constrained to be a partial melt of syenite formed in equilibrium with residual feldspar. The differences reflect a primarily deeper, more mafic magma system beneath La Palma during its late shield-building stage, whereas recent magmatic evolution at Tenerife occurs primarily at lower temperatures in small, shallower magma systems formed during its post–basaltic shield stage. Differentiation takes millennia or less.
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 2019-09-23
    Description: The existence of an intrinsic depleted component in mantle plumes has previously been proposed for several hotspots in the Pacific, Atlantic, and Indian Oceans. However, formation of these depleted basalts is often associated with unusual tectonomagmatic processes such as plume-ridge interaction or multistage melting at plume initiation, where depleted basalts could reflect entrainment and melting of depleted upper mantle. Late Cretaceous to middle Eocene seamounts that accreted in Costa Rica and are part of the early Galapagos hotspot track provide new insights into the occurrence and nature of intrinsic depleted components. The Paleocene (ca. 62 Ma) seamounts include unusually depleted basalts that erupted on the Farallon plate far from a mid-ocean ridge. These basalts closely resemble Gorgona komatiites in terms of trace element and radiogenic isotope composition, suggesting formation from a similar, refractory mantle source. We suggest that this source may be common to plumes, but is only rarely sampled due to excessive extents of melting required to extract melts from the most refractory parts of a heterogeneous mantle plume.
    Type: Article , PeerReviewed
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  • 3
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    GSA, Geological Society of America
    In:  Geology, 43 (4). pp. 275-278.
    Publication Date: 2017-05-17
    Description: The rocks in the crustal section of the Oman ophiolite show an increasing input of a subduction component with time, most likely reflecting the generation of the ophiolite above a subducting slab. Field relations, new geochemical data, and Nd-Hf isotope data for felsic to mafic intrusive rocks in the mantle harzburgite from the Haylayn block in the Oman ophiolite suggest late magmatic events in a mantle wedge shortly before obduction of the ophiolite. Incompatible element contents and low εNd and εHf of the felsic rocks exclude differentiation from mafic magmas, but are consistent with an origin by partial melting of pelagic sediments similar to leucogranites in continental collision zones. These melts apparently mixed with mafic magmas resembling enriched late-stage lavas from the ophiolite. The leucogranitic intrusions into the mantle wedge confirm the transfer of melts of sediments from the subducted plate into the mantle at subduction zones. We suggest that the enrichment of Rb, K, and Pb observed in the Oman boninites is caused by addition of melts of sediments similar to those from the Haylayn block to the boninite source in the mantle wedge.
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 2017-08-03
    Description: We present analytical results from four dredge locations across the eastern Zealandia continental margin and adjacent ocean crust. The 115 Ma dacites dredged from the West Wishbone Ridge (WWR) are isotopically primitive, weakly adakitic, slab-derived lavas. The 97 Ma A-type granites and a basalt from the easternmost Chatham Rise enlarge the known area of postsubduction Gondwana magmatism. Amphibolite-grade schists from a fault block south of the Chatham Rise provide a critical bridge between the Zealandia and West Antarctica belts of Jurassic–Cretaceous accretionary prism rocks. The new recognition of the WWR as a remnant of a 115 Ma intraoceanic subduction system means that previous hypotheses of the WWR as a fracture zone or spreading ridge require modification. The dacite ages constrain the start of Osbourn Trough spreading, which caused breakup of the Hikurangi-Manihiki igneous plateau, to before 115 Ma. We speculate that, after 115 Ma, the WWR was rifted by an intraoceanic spreading center that developed along its southeast side. Impingement of this spreading center against the Gondwana margin led to widespread 95–100 Ma postsubduction magmatism, variable lithospheric stretching, and ultimately continental splitting of Zealandia and West Antarctica across basement trends.
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 2017-05-17
    Description: Bowers Ridge is an similar to 700 km long arcuate ridge behind the Central Aleutian Arc in the Bering Sea. The lack of age and geochemical data for the ridge has hampered the development of geodynamic models for the evolution of the North Pacific and the Aleutian-Bering Sea region. Here we present the first geochemical and Ar-40/Ar-39 age data for the volcanic basement of Bowers Ridge and a seamount from the western end of the ridge sampled during R/V Sonne cruise SO201-1b. The northern Bowers Ridge basement (26-32 Ma) consists of mafic to intermediate calc-alkaline rocks with adakite-like (Sr/Y = 33-53, La-N/Yb-N = 3.3-7.8), high field strength element (HFSE)-depleted (e.g., Nb-N/La-N = 0.07-0.31) trace element patterns and Sr-Nd-Pb isotope compositions within the Western Aleutian Arc array, implying magma generation above an obliquely subducting slab. The seamount samples (22-24 Ma) are HFSE-rich alkaline olivine basalts (La-N/Yb-N = 3.3-3.9, Nb-N/La-N = 1.0-1.4) with minor arc-type trace element signatures (Pb-N/Ce-N = 1.4-1.6, K-N/Nb-N = 1.7-1.9) but with Pacific mid-oceanic-ridge basalt (MORB)-like isotopic compositions, pointing to an origin by small-degree decompression melting from slightly subduction-modified mantle. The geochemistry of the recovered rocks can be explained by highly oblique subduction along the northern part of Bowers Ridge in its present-day configuration, consistent with an in-situ origin of Bowers Ridge as a Cenozoic island arc.
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 2017-08-04
    Description: U-Th-Ra disequilibria of basanites, tephrites, and phonolites from the A.D. 1585 eruption on La Palma, Canary Islands, constrain magma differentiation times in an ocean-island rift zone. The insignificant difference in (230Th)/(232Th) implies differentiation from basanite to phonolite in 〈15 k.y. 226Ra has a half-life of 1600 yr, however, and permits higher temporal resolution; (226Ra)/(230Th) disequilibria are highest in the phonolites (46%–54%) and basanites (44%–47%) and lowest in the tephrites (38%–41%). The higher 226Ra excesses in the end-member compositions model basanite-phonolite differentiation within 1550–1750 yr at a rate of 0.04% fractional crystallization per year. Such a short time interval is in sharp contrast to the ∼200 k.y. proposed for phonolite differentiation on the neighboring island of Tenerife and could reflect different volcanic systems, with a mantle-fed rift system on La Palma versus a crustal magma reservoir on Tenerife.
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 2017-05-18
    Description: Seamounts can provide conduits for the entry and exit of hydrothermal fluids in ocean basins. However, only a few ridge flank hydrothermal systems that discharge through seamounts have been discovered, all located on relatively young crust. We have retrieved samples from 126 m.y. old Henry Seamount, an extinct volcano near the youngest Canary island of El Hierro, that provide evidence for Holocene low-temperature hydrothermal fluid discharge. This is the first documented finding of such activity at the Canary archipelago. The samples include shells from vesicomyid clams 〈18.6 k.y. old, massive barite, and trachytes that are pervasively barite metasomatized. Sulfur, oxygen, and strontium isotope ratios of barite indicate that the fluid contained residual sulfate from microbial reduction at the recharge site and reacted with basement rocks. Recharge probably occurred at basement outcrops of El Hierro's submarine flank at 25–30 km distance, the driving force for hydrothermal circulation through old crust being provided by increased basal heat flow from Canary magmatism. The data show that island flanks may provide important recharge sites for seawater circulation and that even old and small seamounts can contribute to heat and mass exchange between ocean crust and seawater.
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