Title of article :
Seismic anisotropy and compositionally induced velocity anomalies in the lithosphere above mantle plumes: a petrological and microstructural study of mantle xenoliths from French Polynesia
Author/Authors :
Tommasi، نويسنده , , Andréa and Godard، نويسنده , , Marguerite and Coromina، نويسنده , , Guilhem and Dautria، نويسنده , , Jean-Marie and Barsczus، نويسنده , , Hans، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2004
Pages :
18
From page :
539
To page :
556
Abstract :
In addition to thermal erosion, plume/lithosphere interaction may induce significant changes in the lithosphere chemical composition. To constrain the extent of this process in an oceanic environment and its consequences on the lithosphere seismic properties, we investigated the relationship between petrological processes and microstructure in mantle xenoliths from different hotspots tracks in South Pacific Superswell region: the Austral-Cook, Society, and Marquesas islands in French Polynesia. Olivine forsterite contents in the studied spinel peridotites vary continuously from Fo91 to Fo83. Dunites and wehrlites display the lowest forsterite contents. Their microstructure and high Ni contents preclude a cumulate origin, suggesting that these rocks result from melt/rock reactions involving olivine precipitation and pyroxene dissolution. In addition, lherzolites and wehrlites display evidence of late crystallization of clinopyroxene, which may result from a near-solidus melt–freezing reaction. These data suggest that the lithosphere above a mantle plume undergoes a complex sequence of magmatic processes that significantly change its composition. These compositional changes, particularly iron enrichment in olivine, result in lower P- and S-waves velocities. Relative to normal lithospheric mantle, compositionally induced seismic anomalies may attain −2.2% for S-waves and −1% for P-waves. Smaller negative anomalies for P-waves are due to a higher sensitivity to modal composition. Conversely, crystal-preferred orientations (CPO) and seismic anisotropy are little affected by these processes. Lherzolites and harzburgites, independent from composition, show high-temperature porphyroclastic microstructures and strong olivine CPO. Dunites and wehrlites display annealing microstructures to which is associated a progressive dispersion of the olivine CPO. Very weak, almost random olivine CPO is nevertheless rare, suggesting that CPO destruction is restricted to domains of intense magma–rock interaction due to localized flow or accumulation of magmas.
Keywords :
mantle plumes , Melt percolation , Melt–rock reaction , Seismic anisotropy , upper mantle , lithosphere , Seismic tomography
Journal title :
Earth and Planetary Science Letters
Serial Year :
2004
Journal title :
Earth and Planetary Science Letters
Record number :
2324095
Link To Document :
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