Title of article
Dynamic melting in plume heads: the formation of Gorgona komatiites and basalts
Author/Authors
Arndt، نويسنده , , Nicholas T. and Kerr، نويسنده , , Andrew C. and Tarney، نويسنده , , John، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1997
Pages
13
From page
289
To page
301
Abstract
The small Pacific island of Gorgona, off the coast of Colombia, is well known for its spectacular spinifex-textured komatiites. These high-Mg liquids, which have been linked to a late Cretaceous deep mantle plume, are part of a volcanic series with a wide range of trace-element compositions, from moderately enriched basalts ( La/SmN ∼ 1.5) to extremely depleted ultramafic tuffs and picrites ( La/SmN ∼ 0.2). Neither fractional crystallization, nor partial melting of a homogeneous mantle source, can account for this large variation: the source must have been chemically heterogeneous. Low 143Nd/144Nd in the more enriched basalts indicates some initial source heterogeneity but most of the variation in magma compositions is believed to result from dynamic melting during the ascent of a plume. Modelling of major- and trace-element compositions suggests that ultramafic magmas formed at ∼ 60–100 km depth, and that the melt extraction that gave rise to their depleted sources started at still greater depths. The ultra-depleted lavas represent magmas derived directly from the hottest, most depleted parts of the plume; the more abundant moderately depleted basalts are interpreted as the products of pooling of liquids from throughout the melting region.
Keywords
komatiite , melting , Gorgona Island Colombia , mantle plumes , geochemistry
Journal title
Earth and Planetary Science Letters
Serial Year
1997
Journal title
Earth and Planetary Science Letters
Record number
2320310
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