• 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