Publication Date:
2017-04-04
Description:
In magmatic systems having CO2 as main volatile, the dynamics of magma ascent and
decompression can be faster than that of CO2 diffusion into bubbles. In this case, the
diffusivity ratios between CO2 and noble gases, rather than solubility ratios, are the
main control of the proportions of CO2 and noble gases in the exsolving gas phase.
We have developed a model of bubble growth in silicate melts that calculates the
extent of both CO2 supersaturation and kinetic fractionation among noble gases in
vesicles in relation to the decompressive rate of basaltic melts. By including the stateof
art calculations of solubilities and diffusivities of the involved volatiles, the model
predicts that magma degassing at low pressure fractionates both He/Ar and He/CO2
ratios by a similar extent, due to comparable Ar and CO2 diffusivity. In contrast, the
slower CO2 diffusion at high pressure causes early kinetic effects on Ar/CO2 ratio and
dramatically changes the degassing paths.
When applied to the global He-Ar-CO2 dataset of fluid inclusions in mid-ocean-ridge
glasses, the model displays that non-equilibrium fractionations among He, Ar and
CO2, driven by their different diffusivities in silicate melts, are common in most of the
natural conditions of magma decompression and their signature strongly depends on
pressure of degassing. The different geochemical signatures among suites of data coming
from different ridge segments mainly depend on the depth of the magma chamber
where the melt was stored. Moreover, variations inside a single suite emerge due to the
interplay between variable ascent speed of magma and cooling rate of the emplaced
lava.
As a result, two data groups coming from the Pito Seamount suite (Easter Microplate
East ridge), showing different degree of CO2 supersaturation and He/Ar fractionation,
provide ascent rates which differ by ten folds or even more. The large variations
in both the He/CO2 and Ar/CO2 ratios at almost constant He/Ar, displayed in products
coming from the Mid-Atlantic Ridge 24–30°N segment and the Rodriguez Triple
Junction, require magma storage and degassing processes occurring at high-pressure
conditions. In contrast, the simultaneous increase in both He/CO2 and He/Ar of the
East Pacific Rise and South-East Indian Ridge data sets suggests the dominance of
low-pressure fractionation, implying that the shallow magma chambers are at a lower
depth than those of the Mid-Atlantic Ridge 24–30°N and Rodriguez Triple Junction.
Our conclusions support the presence of a relationship between spreading rate and
depth of high-temperature zones below ridges, and are consistent with the depth of
magma chambers as suggested from seismic studies. Finally, the non-equilibrium degassing
model provides striking constraints on the compositions of noble gases and
carbon in mantle-derived magmas. Our results dispense in fact with the supposed need
for He-Ar-CO2 heterogeneities in the upper mantle, because the degassing of a single,
popping-rock-like primary magma is able to explain all the available data.
Description:
Published
Description:
Vienna, Austria
Description:
4.5. Degassamento naturale
Description:
open
Keywords:
equilibrium
;
diffusivity
;
04. Solid Earth::04.08. Volcanology::04.08.03. Magmas
Repository Name:
Istituto Nazionale di Geofisica e Vulcanologia (INGV)
Type:
Oral presentation
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